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2020 year-in-review

Dear friends,

Like many of you, I am welcoming the start of a new year after all of the tension, struggle, suffering and pain of 2020. Despite all the challenges that 2020 presented, I want to share with you a short overview and some highlights of all that we accomplished together as Pax Christi USA during the past year.

Challenging White Supremacy, Supporting Black Lives Matter: In the wake of the murder of George Floyd and the subsequent nationwide protests under the banner of Black Lives Matter, we curated and developed resources for our members and the wider Catholic peace and justice community to pray, study and act to end systemic racism. We issued two major statements which figured prominently in the national Catholic media and reached tens of thousands on social media. The first came immediately after the murder of George Floyd and built on the anti-racism work we’ve been doing since 1995 to unequivocally condemn the racism that seeds terror in our communities of color and disfigures all of humanity. The second was a challenge to the broader Catholic Church to not let white fragility block the conversations we need to have in our churches on racism. We helped organize and promote an action affiliated with Black Lives Matter that attracted hundreds of people outside the St. John Paul II Shrine in Washington, D.C., protesting President Trump’s photo-op there the day after his stunt at St. John’s Episcopal Church where he used the police and military to violently disperse BLM protesters so he could take a photo holding the Bible (awkwardly if you saw the photos). We helped to amplify the voices of Black Catholics on our website and the actions of organizations led by People of Color over our email network and through social media and the website as resources for prayer, study and action throughout the year. And we made racial justice the first issue addressed in our Statement of Principles regarding the 2020 elections. Thousands of Pax Christi USA members on the ground turned out in solidarity at BLM actions from Baltimore to the Bay Area.

On the 75th Anniversary, the Peace Ribbon Project Remembers Hiroshima, Nagasaki: Pax Christi USA facilitated the Peace Ribbon project to observe the 75th anniversary of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and to issue a call to recommit ourselves to advocate for a world free of the threat and tyranny of nuclear weapons. Hundreds of people the world over created special “panels” expressing what they feared losing in the event of nuclear war which Pax Christi USA connected “virtually” into a peace ribbon at a special event online attended by hundreds of people and viewed by over 1,000 to commemorate the anniversary. We created a special website for the project, thepeaceribbon.org, where we featured the ribbon panels and provided resources for prayer, study and action for individuals and communities.

Election 2020 – #VotePax: For engagement by our membership in the 2020 election season, we created the campaign #VotePax with a central organizing “Statement of Principles” that was read by several thousand people on our website and social media. Bishop Stowe published a post-election reflection which we posted to our website that rooted people in hope in the days immediately after the election when the results were still being determined. The piece reached tens of thousands of people through coverage in the media, social media and on our website. Our Fall edition of the membership newsletter, The Peace Current, featured resources for groups and individuals to pray, study and act, and more resources were developed and shared through our website. A special prayer card by Sr. Dianna Ortiz, our Deputy Director, was shared and distributed and we hosted three webinars focusing on issues we wanted elevate in the election: immigration, racism, climate change, economic injustice, nuclear disarmament and military spending. Over 3,000 people attended or viewed these webinars. And as concerns arose about safeguarding the election, we highlighted steps our community could take, including mobilizing over 120 Catholic priests and deacons who preached on or otherwise engaged their parishioners on how to nonviolently respond in the event of a contested election and social unrest.

Our Pandemic Response and the Pledge to Protect Others: Anticipating by several months the politicization of masks, Pax Christi USA launched the Pledge to Protect Others in early May, with over 2500 people signing on to pledge to undertake actions aimed at protecting others, especially the most vulnerable. The effort was launched through its own special website, mypledgetoprotect.org and included a social media campaign which reached tens of thousands of others with our message of a thoughtful compassionate response to the threat of the coronavirus. The Pledge was featured in the national and Catholic media. Additionally we mobilized our members to pray for peace in solidarity daily during the pandemic with a special prayer written by PCUSA National Council member Michelle Sherman which was downloaded or shared by over 15,000 people. Since the pandemic hit during Lent, we pivoted our Lenten campaign of prayer, study and action to include special weekly reflections developed by Pax Christi USA leaders exploring Lent in the context of the pandemic.

Pax Christi USA regions and local groups led the way in their respective locales, witnessing to the “peace of Christ” in a variety of ways, including:

Other items of note:

All this is to say THANK YOU. This is the work of our entire community, from Maine to California, Michigan to Texas, Washington state to Florida and all points in-between. In an extraordinarily difficult year, together we witnessed to the peace of Christ in thousands of ways through prayer, study and action. I hope this cursory overview gives you a sense of the strength and vitality of our movement and excites you for all that we can do together in 2021!

In peace,

Johnny Zokovitch
Executive Director, Pax Christi USA

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