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In 1982 acclaimed Washington Post columnist Colman McCarthy was
invited to teach a course on writing at an impoverished public
school in Washington, D.C. He responded, "I'd rather teach peace."
Thus began the work he has passionately pursued for the past
twenty-five years????????????????????????teaching courses on
nonviolence, conflict management, and peace studies, to students in
a range of schools, from Georgetown University Law Center, to a
juvenile prison, and various high schools in between. I'd Rather
Teach Peace chronicles one semester in six of these schools, as
students find themselves challenged and inspired by an
unconventional course and by a man who believes that if we don't
teach our children peace someone else will teach them violence.
To see if nonviolence could be taught, in 1982 Colman McCarthy
became a volunteer teacher at one of the poorest high schools in
Washington, DC. In the thirty-two years since then, he has taught
peace studies courses for more than ten thousand college and high
school students. Large numbers of those students have faithfully
kept in touch with McCarthy, often with handwritten letters, and he
has answered them with the same seriousness he brought to his
columns and books. The exchanges rise to a rare kind of literature
that blends personal warmth, intellectual honesty, and shared
idealism. The discussions range from peace and war to a host of
other issues of social justice, such as the death penalty, human
rights, poverty, the living wage, animal rights, and vegetarianism.
The wide-ranging letters suggest how teacher and students co-create
a world of more love and less hate.
To see if nonviolence could be taught, in 1982 Colman McCarthy
became a volunteer teacher at one of the poorest high schools in
Washington, DC. In the thirty-two years since then, he has taught
peace studies courses for more than ten thousand college and high
school students. Large numbers of those students have faithfully
kept in touch with McCarthy, often with handwritten letters, and he
has answered them with the same seriousness he brought to his
columns and books. The exchanges rise to a rare kind of literature
that blends personal warmth, intellectual honesty, and shared
idealism. The discussions range from peace and war to a host of
other issues of social justice, such as the death penalty, human
rights, poverty, the living wage, animal rights, and vegetarianism.
The wide-ranging letters suggest how teacher and students co-create
a world of more love and less hate.
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