In this time of tremendous need we can learn much from others who are doing great work on behalf of strangers, family and friends.
Saturday, December 18, 2010
Non-Violent Prisoner Strike in Georgia Crosses Racial Lines
Buddhist or not, this model of non-violence is worthy of note, globally.
"Non-Violent Prisoner Strike in Georgia Crosses Racial Lines Fed up with their living and working conditions, prisoners across the state of Georgia last week staged a six-day mass peaceful protest that transcended racial boundaries.
Black, Latino and white inmates at least six prisons, including Hays State Prison, Telfair State Prison, Macon State Prison and Smith State Prison, banded together to show their unhappiness by staying in their cells. The families of some prisoners reported that corrections officers responded violently, destroying personal effects and beating inmates at one penitentiary while another facility cut off the hot water supply.
Inmates spent months coordinating the protest by using cell phones smuggled into the prisons.
They have demanded better living conditions, medical care and nutrition, more educational and self-improvement opportunities, wages for work performed in prison and better access to their families, among other demands." Article
Buddhist caring must be more than mere engagement. It must cause us to confront the vicissitudes of our own ignorance. Then, and only then, can we say we are at one with the challenge of the human condition. LR
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