Take a look at this Globe and Mail article which talks about peace and commemoration of the war of 1812:
"Bicentennial Military events an affront to Stouffville, Ont's pacifist roots".
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/bicentennial-military-events-affront-to-stouffville-onts-pacifist-roots/article2423730/
Saturday, 5 May 2012
Friday, 4 May 2012
A river runs through it
by Carol Penner
Look
at the land here…does the land on one side look any different than the land on
the other side? It’s a picture taken
from Queenston Heights…the land on the right is the United States, the land on
the left is Canada.
I’ve
been reading a book about the Battle of Queenston Heights, and it says that the
communities on either side of the river were very connected socially. For a long time the only portage around
Niagara Falls was on the American side; everyone used it. People in Youngstown on one side of the river and Newark on the other had parties
and were constantly going back and forth.
Of
course the declaration of war in 1812 changed all that. For the non-resistant
Christians, they refused to buy into the declaration of war…no one was their
enemy. They had friends on both sides of
the border, and tried to treat everyone the same.
But
how good have churches been at keeping up those connections? It used to be that
Mennonites had strong connections with Mennonite churches on the other side of
the river. But gradually over time, we
too have divided into national churches, rather than cross-national church bodies.
I know and have visited churches all over Ontario but I find that I know almost
nothing of my Mennonite neighbours in New York State.
While
we never believed in enemies, how has the division between countries influenced
how we work as a church?
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