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When I visited Auschwitz I was horrified. And when I visited Iraq, I thought to myself, 'What will we tell our children in fifty years when they ask what we did when the people in Iraq were dying.'
Mairead Corrigan
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More quotes by Mairead Corrigan
The experience of a lot of us women is that too much money is being spent on militarism and war.
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Our common humanity is more important than all the things that divide us.
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I believe in a non-killing future.
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It's okay to be scared, but fear is different. Fear is when we let being scared prevent us from doing what love requires of us.
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Setting aside human rights and international law to have an agenda of war and killing and occupation to me is totally unacceptable.
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The vast majority of people have never hurt anybody in their lives, don't want killing, don't want wars. In all the countries of the world, they just want to love their families and get on with their lives.
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People have the right to come and choose their own political solutions.
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I go to places and I see all these people working on peace education and on a culture of nonviolence and non-killing. You look at all these different movements going on: the environment movement, the interfaith movement, the human rights movement, the youth movement, and the arts movement.
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We need radical thinking, creative ideas, and imagination.
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We have to start from the fact that there are always alternatives to violence.
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I believe passionately in the power of people.
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I believe we are on the edge of a quantum leap into a whole new way of organizing and living as a human family.
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Those of us who believe in human rights and the truth - particularly the journalists and the media - should stand in defense of Julian Assange and Bradley Manning. We owe them a lot for telling us the truth of what is happening in our world, and that is why I would continue to support them.
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I am very hopeful that there is a solution to the Israeli/Palestinian injustice.
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Perhaps the greatest contribution that those of us who come from a Christian tradition can make is to throw out the old just-war theory, embrace the nonviolence of Jesus, refuse to kill one another, and truly follow his commandment to love our enemies.
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I witnessed a lot of violence, and I found myself asking the question: Do you ever use violence to try to bring about political change?
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To stand up for peace and against war and for disarmament is very courageous here in America.
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I was born into a Catholic family. I grew up in West Belfast. Faith was very important to us eight children and my mother and father. It was grounded in the Christian tradition of social involvement.
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