Search
Search results for '谷歌引流排名【电报e108⒊⒏】google代发引流.war'
Displaying 81 - 90 of 100 in total
Refusing to kill: conscription and conscience
On 24 January, the head of the British army, General Sir Patrick Sanders stated that the country should train a "citizen army" ready to fight a land war in the future. Prompted by the threat from Russia and similar steps being taken by other European nations, he warned that an increase in reserves forces alone would "not be enough", and a future conflict would have to be a "whole-of-nation-undertaking".
Refusing to kill: conscription and conscience
Grief and hope: marking two years of war in Ukraine
24 February marks two years since the Russian invasion of Ukraine, and this anniversary reminds us to take stock of the enormous toll the war has taken. As well as those who have suffered death, injury or displacement in the war, this anniversary I'll be holding in my heart those who are courageously objecting to participating in it, or working for peace and nonviolent resistance, often at great risk.
Grief and hope: marking two years of war in Ukraine
Witnessing for peace at Yearly Meeting
There are 110 armed conflicts currently happening across the world. Each will have its victims – the combatants, civilians, families, children, plus the impact on the economic, emotional and cultural life of the countries at war. Britain is not at war, but we too can see the effects of money spent on arms and of a mindset that war is a valid way of achieving aims.
Witnessing for peace at Yearly Meeting
Why, on this International Peace Day, we’re talking about climate justice
21 September marks the International Day of Peace and the start of the first ever Global Week of Action for Peace and Climate Justice; an initiative which Quakers in Britain have been coordinating with an international network of organisations. This year, peace and climate justice movements will be coming together in recognition of their shared vision of a world in which human and natural life can thrive.
Why, on this International Peace Day, we’re talking about climate justice
The ones who are forgotten on Remembrance Day
It's said that truth is the first victim of war. If that's so, then close on truth's heels is a second victim: the right not to take part in it.
The ones who are forgotten on Remembrance Day
The long-term cost of war: how sending landmines to Ukraine undermines the fight for a mine-free future
After I spoke on the radio back in 2023 about peace and pacifism in the context of the war in Ukraine, I had a Quaker get in touch with me. One problem with war, he said, was its corrupting nature "even on those whose cause, like the Ukrainians, is just". Over time, groups and countries can start to use tactics that they earlier condemned, such as the use of landmines.
The long-term cost of war: how sending landmines to Ukraine undermines the fight for a mine-free future
The quick and the good: building a peace that lasts
For those who care about peace in the world and the equal worth of all people, these are troubling times. As one Quaker put it recently, the constant barrage of attacks on our testimonies creates a spiritual as well as political crisis.
The quick and the good: building a peace that lasts
"I am dedicated to ending this unjust war"
Sasha's letter was read at this year's International Conscientious Objectors Day reflection, where we give thanks for all who resist the drumbeat of war and instead prefer to walk the path of peace. It can often feel like we are in an endless cycle of violence. Yet the cycle is broken each and every time someone exercises their globally recognised right and refuses to take part in killing.
"I am dedicated to ending this unjust war"
Remembering Srebrenica: 30 years on
Friday 11 July 2025 will mark 30 years since the massacre at Srebrenica, when over 8,000 Bosniak (Bosnian Muslim) men, and boys over 12, were murdered in the town in the worst single event of the Bosnian civil war of 1992–1995. Churches have come together to organise events to mark this anniversary, and we encourage Quakers to support them.
Remembering Srebrenica: 30 years on