Wehaa:
User Box
 
Home Marcey  Activist Julie Enslow Earns a Lifetime Peacemaker Award
Tuesday, October 7,2008

Activist Julie Enslow Earns a Lifetime Peacemaker Award


Activist Julie Enslow Earns a Lifetime Peacemaker Award BY BILL CHRISTOFFERSON

Twenty-five years ago, back in the heyday of antinuclear power and weapons activism, I spent several years as director of a Madison-based organization called Nukewatch. 

My primary Milwaukee contact was Julie Byrnes Enslow, with an organization called Mobilization for Survival. I went off and worked in politics for almost 25 years, then came back to antiwar work after my retirement a year ago—and found Julie Enslow still at the center of the action in Milwaukee, now with Peace Action-Wisconsin, the successor to Mobilization for Survival.

She says her current focus is on nuclear weapons nonproliferation, stopping weapons in space, the Israeli/Palestinian conflict and ending the U.S. war and occupation in Iraq. But the list is really much longer.

Now, Enslow is about to get some welldeserved recognition for her lifetime of work for peace and social justice. Enslow will receive a Lifetime Peacemaker Award on Oct. 4 from the Wisconsin Network for Peace and Justice (WNPJ), a statewide network of 159 organizations working for social change.

Enslow’s activism began in the 1960s with an open-housing campaign and civil-rights actions, working with United Farm Workers and against the Vietnam War.

With an art degree from Cardinal Stritch University, she taught art in inner-city Catholic schools and community centers, and also taught high-school religious doctrine classes from 1963-1971 at St. Roberts Catholic Church, bringing in draft counselors and community activists to speak to the students. “I was not asked back after 1971,” she says. “I guess they disapproved when several of my students became conscientious objectors to war.” She was a founding member of Mobilization for Survival, now Peace Action-Wisconsin, in 1977. As a volunteer organizer and staff member of Peace Action, Enslow helped initiate the Milwaukee Organizing Committee Against the Gulf War, and worked with the Nuclear Weapons Freeze and Jobs with Peace referendum campaigns.


She has traveled to the former Soviet Union and to Israel and Palestine as part of national peace delegations, and served as a national board member of Peace Action and co-chair of the Wisconsin Network for Peace and Justice.

Enslow, an energetic 68, works quietly but determinedly. She’s humble, not flamboyant, but she’s persistent and gets results. No task is beneath her. She might wince at the military reference, but she is in the trenches, not back at the command post. Her hands-on work includes cooking for St. Benedict’s Community Meal Program since it was founded more than 30 years ago. She and her husband of 46 years, Jim, have four children, including one “adopted through the heart,” she says. The WNPJ Lifetime Awards presentation will be held at 4 p.m. on Oct. 4 at the WNPJ Fall Assembly at Marquette University’s Alumni Memorial Union, #227, 1442 W. Wisconsin Ave. Everyone’s welcome to attend that event, as well as a party to honor Enslow and the other WNPJ award recipient, John Kinsman, an 82-year-old dairy farmer activist, at the Irish Cultural & Heritage Center, 2133 W. Wisconsin Ave., with speakers, food, music and more from 5-9 p.m., for a $10 donation.

(Bill Christofferson is a member of the steering committee of the national Iraq Moratorium, and has been nominated for election on Oct. 4 as cochair of the Wisconsin Network for Peace and Justice.) What’s your take? Write: editor@shepex.com or comment on this story online at www.expressmilwaukee.com.

Share
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
 
 
Elections 2008
Obama seeks greater rein on financial institutions (AP)

President Obama makes a statement on AIG, Wednesday, March 18, 2009, on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, prior to departing for a trip to California.  (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)AP - President Barack Obama says he wants Congress to pass legislation giving the government greater regulatory authority over financial institutions like American International Group.


Sources: Pentagon to stop forced tour extension (AP)

US Department of Defense handout photo shows an aerial view of the River Entrance of the Pentagon. The US military successfully shot down a short-range ballistic missile near Hawaii in a test of its ground-based missile defense system, the Pentagon said.(AFP/DoD-HO/File)AP - The Army will substantially reduce use of the unpopular practice of holding troops beyond their enlistment dates and will pay $500 to those still forced to stay in the service, defense and congressional officials said Wednesday.


AIG head shares US anger of bonuses but backs them (AP)

In a Thursday, Dec. 11, 2008 file photo, Edward Liddy, chairman and chief executive officer of American International Group Inc., (AIG), speaks in Hong Kong. Liddy goes to Capitol Hill this morning, March 18, 2009, where he'll reluctantly defend millions of dollars' worth of bonuses doled out to employees despite the company's need for a $170 billion government bailout. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung, File)AP - The chief executive officer of failed insurance conglomerate AIG acknowledged Wednesday that the company's multimillion-dollar bonuses were "distasteful" to many and had provoked a firestorm of wrath. "I share that anger," Edward Liddy, chairman and CEO of the American International Group Inc., said in testimony prepared for Congress.


Analysis: White House, Dems backpedaling on AIG (AP)

An AIG office building is shown Wednesday, March 18, 2009 in New York. Edward Liddy, chairman and CEO of American International Group acknowledged Wednesday to congressional interrogators that some of the insurance giant's executive bonuses are 'distasteful.'  (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)AP - For the first time since last fall's election, Democrats and the Obama administration are backpedaling furiously on an issue easily understood by financially strapped taxpayers: $165 million in bonuses paid out at bailed-out AIG.


Pence: Return AIG donations (Politico)
Politico - House Republican Conference Chairman Mike Pence is urging politicians from both parties to strongly consider returning campaign contributions from AIG.
..Search Shepherd Express
Top Stories
AIG head shares US anger of bonuses but backs them (AP)

In a Thursday, Dec. 11, 2008 file photo, Edward Liddy, chairman and chief executive officer of American International Group Inc., (AIG), speaks in Hong Kong. Liddy goes to Capitol Hill this morning, March 18, 2009, where he'll reluctantly defend millions of dollars' worth of bonuses doled out to employees despite the company's need for a $170 billion government bailout. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung, File)AP - The chief executive officer of failed insurance conglomerate AIG acknowledged Wednesday that the company's multimillion-dollar bonuses were "distasteful" to many and had provoked a firestorm of wrath. "I share that anger," Edward Liddy, chairman and CEO of the American International Group Inc., said in testimony prepared for Congress.


Obama seeks greater rein on financial institutions (AP)

President Obama gestures while making a statement on AIG, Wednesday, March 18, 2009, on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington.  Joining him, from left are, Council of Economic Advisers Director Christina Romer, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, and Director of the National Economic Council Lawrence Summers.  (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)AP - President Barack Obama says he wants Congress to pass legislation giving the government greater regulatory authority over financial institutions like American International Group.


Consumer prices rise by largest amount in 7 months (AP)

In this March 10, 2009 file photo, Doug Kemp, of Sturbridge, Mass., pumps gas at the Ell-Bern service station in Boston. Consumer prices rose in February by the largest amount in seven months as gasoline prices surged again and clothing costs jumped the most in nearly two decades.  (AP Photo/Lisa Poole, file)AP - Consumer prices rose in February by the largest amount in seven months as gasoline prices surged again and clothing costs jumped the most in nearly two decades.


Arts

Going Out on a Pier to Buy A Home

Late last week, New York City went out on a limb, or a pier to be exact, to help a group of people in Queens. For almost 100 years the 17 houses on Beach 84th Street Pier were owned by the state or

Order your Halloween POSTER
 
 
Close