Canadian Church
Leaders
Seek End to Nuclear Weaponry
The Salvation Army War Cry
April 25, 1998
On Thursday, February 26, 1998, a representative
group of church leaders went before the standing Committee of
the House of Commons to talk about the moral urgency of a global
drive to abolish nuclear weapons. This is one of the many social
justice issues which The Salvation Army in this territory, in
partnership with other churches and agencies, is seeking to address
and resolve. The following letter addressed to Prime Minister
Chretien from church leaders in Canada, was signed by Commissioner
Donald V. Kerr, territorial commander.
Salvationists need to be involved actively where
we are, in social services, but also in collaboration with others
to seek to advocate action on the many and varied social justice
issues which threaten to damage and destroy families, and our
world.
Dear Prime Minister Chretien,
We write in deep appreciation of your government's persistent
and courageous leadership in the ongoing effort to rid the world
of the scourge of anti-personnel landmines, and to challenge you
to bring that same visionary dedication to bear on efforts to
rid the world of nuclear weapons.
Our church communities rejoiced with all Canadians,
and especially with people in mine-affected countries, in that
proud moment in Ottawa last December when Foreign Affairs Minister
Lloyd Axworthy signed the land mines treaty on behalf of Canada
and when you handed to the UN Secretary-General a copy of the
legislation confirming Canada as the first country to ratify the
treaty. It was truly a milestone event, showing the world what
can be achieved when governments and movements work together,
and particularly, when leaders step forward to challenge and encourage
others.
We are grateful for your personal commitment to
the effort to ban land mines and for the key role played by Mr.
Axworthy and many officials in the Department of Foreign Affairs.
Our gratitude and congratulations to you and your colleagues also
extend to the many thousands of Canadians, individuals and organizations,
who provided energy and expertise to make this achievement possible.
Canadian church communities, responding to God's
call to all people to be agents of love and healing in a world
that still knows great pain, participated in the movement to ban
land mines. As church leaders, we believe that obedience to that
same call of God requires us now to raise our voices in urgent
appeal to our own communities, to all Canadians, and to you and
your government, to bring a new commitment to what we believe
to be one of the most profound spiritual challenges of our era
-- the challenge to rid the world of the plans and the means to
nuclear annihilation.
The willingness, indeed the intent, to launch a
nuclear attack in certain circumstances bespeaks spiritual and
moral bankruptcy. We believe it to be an extraordinary affront
to humanity for nuclear weapon states and their allies, including
Canada, to persist in claiming that nuclear weapons are required
for their security. Nuclear weapons do not, cannot, deliver security
-- they deliver only insecurity and peril through their promise
to annihilate that which is most precious, life itself and the
global ecosystem upon which all life depends. Nuclear weapons
have no moral legitimacy, they lack military utility, and, in
light of the recent judgement of the World Court, their legality
is in serious question. The spiritual, human and ecological holocaust
of a nuclear attack can be prevented only by the abolition of
nuclear weapons -- it is our common duty to pursue that goal as
an urgent priority.
The Canadian churches have long worked for the
elimination of nuclear weapons. In 1982, we leaders wrote to,
and met with, Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau to affirm "nuclear
weapons in any form and in any number cannot ultimately be accepted
as legitimate components of national armed forces." In 1988,
we sent the same message to Prime Minister Brian Mulroney, stating
that " nuclear weapons have no place in national defence
policies."
Since then we have welcomed the substantial progress
that has been made to end the nuclear arms race and reduce the
size of the superpowers' nuclear arsenals, But these steps, important
as they are, are not nearly enough. The end of the Cold War has
created an unprecedented opportunity to start the process toward
the final elimination of nuclear weapons and the World Court has
confirmed that it is a legal obligation.
We are therefore especially disturbed by the refusal
of nuclear weapons states to even begin negotiations on the abolition
of nuclear weapons and to set clear time frames and objectives
- and we are profoundly disappointed that Canada has to date chosen
to publicly accept that refusal. Indeed, nuclear weapon states
continue to take steps to maintain and improve or modernize"
their nuclear arsenals for the indefinite future.
It is our sincere belief that Canada has much to
contribute to the effort to make nuclear abolition a reality In
this regard, we are heartened by your pledge in Securing Our Future
Together (the second "Red Book") that "a re-elected
Liberal government will... work vigorously to eliminate nuclear
and chemical weapons and antipersonnel mines from the planet."
We are compelled to note, however, that Canada continues to support,
and to seek the illusory protection of, nuclear weapons in a number
of ways (see the Appendix, pp. 3-4). Canada's position as an advocate
of nuclear disarmament in the UN General Assembly, the Conference
on Disarmament, and other forums is compromised by this fact.
The time has come for Canada to take a strong,
principled stand against the continued possession of nuclear weapons
by any state, affirming abolition as the central goal of Canadian
nuclear weapons policy and adding Canada's voice to the call to
immediately begin negotiations on a Nuclear Weapons Convention.
In support of this goal, Canada should immediately
take the following actions:
Urge all states to negotiate by the year 2000 an
agreement for the elimination of nuclear weapons within a time-bound
framework;
Urge all nuclear weapons states, as interim measures
and as a sign of good faith in such negotiations, to take all
their nuclear forces off alert status and to commit themselves
to no-first-use of nuclear weapons;
Renounce any role for nuclear weapons in Canadian
defence policy, and call on other countries, including Russia
and Canada's NATO allies, to do likewise;
Review the legality of all of Canada's nuclear-weapons
related activities in the light of the International Court of
Justice ruling of July 8, 1996, and move quickly upon the completion
of this review to end all activities determined to be of questionable
legality; and,
Embrace publicly the conclusions of the Canberra
Commission report of August 14,1996, including in particular its
recommendations that the nuclear weapons states "commit themselves
unequivocally to the elimination of nuclear weapons and agree
to start work immediately on the practical steps and negotiations
required for its achievement" and that the non-nuclear states
support this commitment and join in co-operative international
action to implement it.
As it approaches the dawn of a new Millennium,
Canada could offer no finer demonstration of its commitment to
being a constructive and healing presence in the international
community than to deploy some of its considerable diplomatic skill
and political capital to ensure that the world enters the next
Millennium with a formal treaty commitment to rid the world of
the scourge of nuclear weapons.
The Canadian churches which we represent are committed
to continuing their work toward the abolition of nuclear weapons,
in co-operation with other Canadian and international nuclear
abolition efforts. In this spirit of co-operation and common cause,
we respectfully request the opportunity to meet with you at the
earliest possible date to explore ways in which Canadian churches
can further support the government in taking bold new steps to
make nuclear weapons abolition an urgent priority.
We look forward to your early response. Please
know that you and your colleagues in the Government of Canada
are supported by the prayers and good wishes of Canadians.
His Eminence Metropolitan Archbishop Sotiros, Greek
Orthodox Metropolis of Toronto (Canada); Fr. Anthony Nikolie,
Polish National Catholic Church of Canada; Mr. M. L. Bailey, Christian
Church (Disciples of Christ) in Canada; Jim Moerman, Reformed
Church in America; Fr. Marcos Marcos, St. Mark's Coptic Orthodox
Church; The Very Rev. Bill Phipps, United Church of Canada; Bishop
Telmor Sartison, Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada; Archbishop
H. Derderian, Primate, Canadian Diocese of the Armenian Orthodox
Church; Marvin Frey, Executive Director, Mennonite Central Committee
Canada; The Rev. Dr. Kenneth W Bellous, Executive Minister, Baptist
Convention of Ontario and Quebec; Rt. Rev. Dr. Daniel D. Rupwate,
General Superintendent, British Methodist Episcopal Church; The
Right Rev. Seraphim, Bishop of Ottawa and Canada, Orthodox Church
in America; The Most Rev. Michael G. Peers, Primate, The Anglican
Church of Canada; The Rev. Messale Engeda, Ethiopian Orthodox
Tewahedo Church; Donald V. Kerr Commissioner, The Salvation Army;
John Congram, Moderator, Presbyterian Church in Canada; Bishop
Francois Thibodeau, c.j.m., President, The Episcopal Commission
on Social Affairs, Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops; Gale
Wills, Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) in Canada.
The Salvation Army's Positional
Statement on World Peace (1990)
The Salvation Army as part of the Universal Christian
Church, seeks the establishment of peace as proclaimed by Jesus
Christ. The Army recognizes that the world's problems cannot be
solved by force, and that greed and pride, coupled with the widespread
desire for domination, poison the souls of men and sow seeds of
conflict.
Since there exists in thermonuclear weapons a destructive
power of vast proportions almost too frightful to contemplate,
The Salvation Army believes that nuclear disarmament by all nations
is a necessary element of world peace. However, a nation has the
right to defend itself against the aggression of another nation.
The Salvation Army continues to be deeply concerned
with the investment of huge financial resources to aid the escalating
production of terrifying weapons of mass destruction, rather than
the diversion of these funds to socioeconomic growth throughout
the world. Disarmament, peace and development are inextricably
linked.
The Salvation Army pledges its members to pray
and work for peace and to seek to realize the Church's unique
witness to the source of true peace, God himself.
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