“Christians no longer take up the sword against nation, not do we learn war any more, having become children of peace, for the sake of Jesus, who is our leader.”
Creative Nonviolence transforms our lives and our world by unleashing our capacity for connection, compassion, and cooperation.
Creative Nonviolence can help us discover: nonviolent options in the face of the conflicts and challenges we deal with every day; tools for nurturing peaceful relationship and tapping healing power in our lives; and ways to mend the broken circles in our communities and in our larger world.
Through this organized love creative nonviolence can:
Creative Nonviolence is a global legacy of every human being. It has been cultivated by communities throughout the world that have faced enormous oppression and violence. Over the last century, this nonviolent power has been used to challenge violence and injustice in India, the Philippines, Poland, South Africa, Chile, Argentina, Ukraine, Serbia, and the former Soviet Union.
In the United States, nonviolent movements have sparked several meaningful historical social transformations, including women’s suffrage, the eight hour work day, ending legal racial segregation, environmental protection, stopping the Vietnam War, nuclear testing, and championing a wide spectrum of human and civil rights.
Throughout the world, people from all walks of life have unleashed creative nonviolence to work for the survival and dignity of all.
Violence is any personal, interpersonal, institutional or systemic act, attitude or policy that dehumanizes, diminishes or destroys. It thrives by passive or active support.
Creative nonviolence actively withdraws consent from violence and breaks the cycle of retaliation. It creates the conditions for a way that is neither violent nor passive — a way that is more human and effective.
It does this by unleashing a different form of power.
Power is the capacity to bring about change. Economist and peace researcher Kenneth Boulding writes that there are three kinds of power: coercive power; exchange power; and integrative power. Building on Boulding’s thought, Professor Michael Nagler highlights the impact of each:
Violence distances us; creative nonviolence brings us closer together. This is possible because, at our very foundations, we are already connected, united, “integrated.” As science is revealing in new ways every day, the interconnectedness of all being – the unity and oneness of all life – is a reality. Violence, including injustice and many forms of destructiveness, tears at this web of reality, while creative nonviolence is geared toward rediscovering and strengthening this unity.
Love is the heart of creative nonviolence. This organized love includes loving our opponent. In this context love is a process that acknowledges, safeguards and engages with the humanness, woundedness, and sacredness of the other, while actively challenging and resisting her or his violence and injustice.
Creative nonviolence is a core human value that unifies rather than threatens; integrates rather than fragments and destroys; and transforms rather than tears apart. It is rooted in the depths of our being that make alternatives to cruelty and injustice possible at all: love, compassion, hope, possibility, self-transcendence. These powerful forces draw us to our inmost, elemental foundations, even as they urge us to change the world.