Emily Howland
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“My dear friends,
Our president has asked me for a report to your convention on Peace; altho this line of work is no longer scheduled in our Director, there has surely never been a time when our testimony against war would have been more fitting. So I glady accept her suggestion, but regret that so little has been done when the need was so great. Some of the clergy have been asked to preach sermons on Peace and have done so. The “Messenger of Peace” and the “World Tomorrow” have been distributed with other literature.
We, too quickly, forget what is not pleasant to remember or we dismiss the thought with the quieting feeling that we cannot do anything to change conditions.
A few weeks ago in the city of Watertown, you recall, we were given an object lesson in the horrors of War, when the explosion of one bomb destroyed the lives of eight little children at play not far from the deadline thing. Can we do anything to stop the savagery that is evoked by the jealousy of nations?
We can girdle the world with, “No More War”, for our slogan as we carried the message for temperance to all lands, rousing many to work for the rescue of humanity from one of its great destroyers. Failure is impossible if the women of the world, re-inforced by those religious bodies, the Societies of Friends and the mennonites, which have always stood for this principle, and hosts of others unknown say, “No More War”, until its echoes resounding from land to land drown the din of war forever.
The women of today are responsible for what is done in the world, as they never were before, for today women in many lands are enfranchised. The ballot in their hands adds power to their influence. May it not be that in the Divine Order woman’s hour has struck, that in this World Crisis, the strife for mastery between the rule of jealousy, violence and hatred, and their opposites fraternity and trust, woman may be a powerful factor in the work of reconciliation in bringing order and lasting Peace out of the present chaos.
Some women in all the battle-scarred nations have banded together for this work, a work to save civilization from destruction, which no less an authority than the Prime Minister of England declares would be the result of another war like the last. The world is sick of war but the air is heavy with hate. That spirit must be cast out before the healing of the Nations can follow.
To outlaw war and banish it forever would be an easier job than it is to rout king Alcohol, the latter has devoted subjects, while war has few votaries. Nations have permitted themselves to hold to the character of the savage in dealing with each other. Shall we not add our mite of help in the great work that is to be done? Even tacking the poster, “No More War”, to a wayside tree may have a far-reaching influence for he who runs may read and ponder. Let us act where we can, let us think deeply and keep ourselves alive to all the issues of the time, thus proving ourselves worthy of the larger life. Let us pray that the vision be ours to see the right and the wisdom to follow the vision.
Cordially yours,
Emily Howland“











