Premier Peace Think Tank Goes Begging

Received via email:

In the decades since World War II, the United States has amassed the
most sophisticated and expensive military in human history and
employed its military, intelligence, diplomatic, and economic power to
wage a costly arms race with the former Soviet Union, dominate the
global arms trade, impose devastating sanctions and embargoes
against regimes it despises, overthrow democratically-elected
governments, and make unholy alliances with corrupt and
repressive rulers who serve US national interests. Meanwhile, during
those same years, an individual armed only with an inquiring mind, a
great intellect, dogged determination, a small staff, a prolific pen,
and a laughably minuscule budget has provided millions of ordinary yet
extraordinary people around the world with the ability to achieve
freedom and democracy through nonviolent action.

Gene Sharp, a major theorist and strategist of nonviolence since
Gandhi, is the scholar whose name is synonymous with “the
politics of nonviolent action.” His monographs, booklets, books and
those of his colleagues at the Albert Einstein Institution have been
translated into 30 languages. His writings, consultations, trainings,
and underground workshops have contributed enormously to
nonviolence movements and nonviolent revolutions around the world –
– in The Philippines, Burma, Palestine, Serbia, Georgia, the
Ukraine, Kyrgyzstan. From the 3-volume tome The Politics of
Nonviolent Action to the 88-page booklet “From Dictatorship to
Democracy” that explains how nonviolent resistance can be used to
undermine repressive regimes, Gene and the Albert Einstein Institution
have had a profound impact on the pedagogy of nonviolence as well
as on events in the world’s public squares.

Our lives have been touched, enriched and shaped by Gene Sharp
and the work of the Albert Einstein Institution as they have guided,
informed and gathered us in the growing nonviolent movements found
on every continent. But we have just learned that the Institution
faces an unsustainable financial shortfall and its board, in September, must seriously consider whether to close its doors. The staff has been cut back to two, including Gene. If the Institution is to continue, it
needs a minimum of $250,000 for the coming year. Most of us had assumed that such influential work was well endowed and funded. We were wrong.

Absent government support or sufficient foundation grants, we must
turn to that uniquely fitting and appropriate force that epitomizes
nonviolence — people power. As surely as we believe in the power of
nonviolence, we believe also that a simple, straight-forward appeal to
you, to your networks and your institutions can generate the funds to
sustain the work of Gene Sharp and the Albert Einstein Institution.
Please send in a check today. And circulate this appeal to others by
e-mail or the postal service. With September soon upon us, the
timeliness of this appeal cannot be stressed too strongly. As we have
learned in our study and practice of nonviolence, we must be prepared
and ready for that special moment in history. That moment is today.

In gratitude to Gene and the Albert Einstein Institution,

Elise Boulding
Carol Bragg
Dorothy F. Cotton
Richard Deats
Marjorie Swann Edwin
David Hartsough
Bernard LaFayette, Jr.
George Lakey
Mary Lord
Jim Lawson
Michael True

To: The Albert Einstein Institution
427 Newbury Street
Boston, MA 02115

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