Join us on February 4, 2008 in AS 122 at 12:00 to re-inaugurate the Peter Carr Peace Center. We are interested in building a center to promote anti-war activism and anti-war education, in getting CSULB to divest from large DOD contractors, in building a peace studies curriculum, in ending the war in Iraq. Refreshments will be sold
For info, contact
Ron Loewe (Anthropology) <rloewe@csulb.edu>
Dennis Kortheuer (History) <dkortheu@csulb.edu> office: 562 985-4440
The Peter Carr Peace Center (PCPC) is a loose network of faculty, students,
staff, and community members who share Peter's values of peace, social justice,
and environmental sanity. We came together in 1981 to honor the memory of
Peter Carr (1925-1981), poet, artist, scholar, and activist. Peter was the
co-founder and first Chair of the CSULB Comparative Literature Department.
Peter was also active in establishing the Alliance for Survival in Southern
California. Its goals: 1) Ban nuclear power, 2) Zero nuclear weapons, 3) Stop
the arms race, 4) Fund human needs. Members of the PCPC have played key roles
in raising peace, justice, and environmental issues at CSULB. Our activities
have included: establishing the Peace Studies Program, resisting ROTC and
the militarization of campus, organizing the campus opposition to the first
Gulf War, and opposing the commercial development of Puvungna. Our Mission
Statement, on the reverse side, is Peter's poetic essay, "In the Summer
We Went to the Mountains."
IN THE SUMMER WE WENT TO THE MOUNTAINS.
In the summer we went to the mountains-Tahquitz, Tuolumne, or maybe Crane
Flat Meadow during the time of the columbines. We showed our kids to the granite
rocks and ponderosa trees, the chaparral and live oaks, the forests of lodgepole
and fir-and the kids never got over it all, any more than we did or the forest
by the rivers out of snow country.
In the summer we went up there and pretended completely, perfectly, that we
were free from the streets of Long Beach and L.A. (We blamed it on the spirits
up there, the perfume from the high dark forests, and the clear sweet waters
of the snow.) We pretended we wouldn't have to come back to what everybody
says is necessary-to the job, the school, to the struggle for mates and security-and
in those days to the marches in the streets against the war. We pretended
the mountains themselves were safe from the business-Americans, from us.
In the summer we became natives or hikers like John Muir or rock climbers.
But always and always we pretended so well that we never for a minute doubted
that the mountains would stay free from America. We never speculated or wondered
about how soon it would all end and the mountains would get to look like our
own homes and our own neighborhoods, with the color of hydrocarbons and the
sound of screeching brakes.
In the summer we used the mountains.
In the summer we pretended that there weren't any oil companies or factories-we
transcended all that. We breathed in the sky-full air for a while. We listened
to the splashing waters-and got ready to go back and struggle for some kind
of justice in the streets. We are still doing it. We are still going up there
to get ready to try to save it, to try to wake up the people in the neighborhoods,
to tell them once again how it is up there, how it really could be for everyone
down here.
I don't know what to do about the mountains of California or the hills behind
my beach house at Ca. 92677-chamise trees and manzanita and purple geraniums
in redwood boxes. The radio is going. Some important man says we need a neutron
bomb. The wet and holy fog blows in from off the sea bringing salt air and
the smell of seaweed.
I am pretending all the time now that I really do know what to do that will
make a difference to the President and his friends. I didn't know before,
but now I pretend that I know what to do-about my own dying, about the dying
biosphere and the managers who act like they own it all forever, old men with
famous names who want to buy and sell my granite stones and my oak trees,
even the ocean.
But I still don't know why I see all this and feel it and they don't, the
managers, who don't care that the sea and all my trees are dying. Where do
they live anyway? I am sending them messages now, all the time, on behalf
of the wind and the seabugs in the wet sand, and for you and for me and for
the mountains of California. I keep telling them. I keep telling them to quit
messing with the steam beds and the sycamore flats and the redwoods up the
coast. I keep telling everyone down here that we have to stop those nuclear
businessmen and their helpers.
In the summer we still go to the mountains.
Peter Carr
1977
posted Nov 1, 2006
eruyle@csulb.edu