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history of CEASE: in Public Conversation

Memorial for Peggy
This article is reprinted from
the Spring 1999 issue of CEASE News.
This year, CEASE is celebrating 20 years of working for a safer world for
children. CEASE began in 1979 with Peggy Schirmer's determination to add the
voices of early childhood educators to the call for a world free of nuclear
weapons. At that time the nuclear freeze movement was gathering momentum. The
UN Conference on World Disarmament had responded to the rising concern about
the bomb and the dangers to everyone, especially children, from the poisoning
of the environment by nuclear waste. In 1982 a million people from all over
the world demonstrated for peace in New York City.
In the summer of 1979, Peggy heard that a mock nuclear bomb explosion was to
be set off at Otis Air Force Base on Cape Cod. She and a friend walked onto
the base and into its child care center to alert the teachers to the
dangers outside their classroom. The teachers, busy with keeping the
classrooms safe, were unaware of the imminent test. Determined to raise the
awareness of teachers, Peg and her friend created a slide show, "Children of
Hiroshima," based on the drawings and words of children who survived the
nuclear blast... children who had been "safe" in their homes and classrooms
when the nuclear disaster struck.
Peggy then organized a workshop for the NAEYC national conference, "Nuclear
Weapons, Our Legacy to Children?" Through the workshop, sixteen teachers
found each other and decided to become an organization. They decided on a
name, "Concerned Educators Allied for a Safe Environment", and began the
development of a network of resources, support and appropriate actions. The
CEASE newsletter, (edited and mailed from Peg Schirmer's kitchen table), and
the annual CEASE Seminar were planned. At the 1980 NAEYC Conference a
speaker from Physicians for Social Responsibility described the dangers of
nuclear radiation for children, followed by the slide show, "The Children of
Hiroshima."
Two years later the newsletter lists members and their activities in many
states as well as involvement with NAEYC affiliate groups. Clearly, this
network struck a responsive chord.
Peggy always attended the yearly NAEYC board meetings "respectfully
submitting" suggestions for ways that the Association could address the
issues of social policy which so directly affect children's lives: military toys,
violence on TV, welfare reform, violence in society.
Every issue of the newsletter has included an editorial written by Peggy:
short, clear, relevant to the current situation but always placing the topic
in the larger context of militarism in conflict with life-giving social
policies. In 1995, she writes, "reliance on military dominance permeates our
whole society endangering international relations, glorifying violence in the
media and wasting the resources needed here and abroad to build a safe and
healthy world for children."
In this issue we pay tribute to Peggy Schirmer. We honor her vision and
leadership with our determination to continue her work as she becomes our
"Founder, Emeritus."
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