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Steve Lieber
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From Daily Planet Staff Reports
The threat of nuclear annihilation in a war started by Iran, Israel and others in the Middle East has escalated to alarming levels, a Hiroshima Memorial Peace Museum chief told a standing-room-only turnout of about 120 people last Wednesday night at UNC Asheville’s Laurel Forum in Karpen Hall.
Steve Lieber, the non-Japanese director of the museum, expressed his concerns about possible Armageddon during an opening presentation for an art exhibit, “Hiroshima and Nagasaki: Images and Stories From Eyewitness Accounts.”
“We are starting to be at the point where the human race is either
going to get rid of nuclear weapons, or let everyone have one,” he
said. “We’re heading toward everyone having nuclear weapons and, with
that, someone will use them.”
Lieber provided an introduction and summation for a lecture and
slide presentation featuring Miyoko Watanabe, a Japanese survivor of
the atomic-bomb assault.
Following an hour-long presentation, Watanabe and Lieber fielded questions from the audience for 20 minutes.
The art exhibit will continue in the lobby of Karpen Hall through Aug.
8. A related event including a screening of “White Light/Black Rain,”
directed by Steven Okazaki, and peace vigil is scheduled at 7 p.m. Aug.
6 at Laurel Forum.
A peace delegation from Hiroshima attended the session, which was sponsored by UNCA’s Center for Diversity Education.
Lieber opened the program by noting that “it is extremely odd
for a non-Japanese to be in charge of something like this,” but that
his appointment largely was the result of the success of his
involvement with the international Mayors for Peace program.
He explained that the exhibit and talk were “all part of
Hiroshima’s sense of crisis,” triggered by the current threat of
nuclear war in the Middle East.
“We are extremely worried about the way things are going” with
nuclear-weapons proliferation, Lieber said. “It’s going far away from
the peace culture ... We are hoping to graduate from the war culture to
the peace culture ... We are going away from the nuclear
nonproliferation agreement.”
In his assessment, the United States, under President Bill
Clinton’s administration in 2000, agreed to shift away from nuclear
weapons, while under President George Bush’s administration in 2005,
the U.S. said only that other countries should get away from possessing
nuclear weapons.
The Arab League stated a few months ago that if Israel ever
officially acknowledges it has nuclear weapon, then Arab countries will
walk away from the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, Lieber noted.
Economies around the world are being “destroyed” by military buildups involving nuclear bombs, Lieber asserted.
He castigated many Western societies for compounding economic
problems by using more than their fair share of the world’s resources.
For instance, Lieber said the U.S. ranks as the fourth most populous
country, but uses 20 percent of its resources. “We’re going to have to
learn to share,” he said. “We can choose the paradigm of deciding by
violence or peaceful means.”
As for the Hiroshima group visiting UNCA, he listed the following key points:
• “Right now, we need to demand everyone get rid of nuclear weapons — the United States must get rid of them, too.”
• As for other crises, “It’s a question of whether we solve problems by violence or peaceful means.”
Lieber then noted that “social movements arise from pain — the
pain people suffer drives these movements.” As examples, he cited
India, led by Mahatma Gandhi, winning freedom from Great Britain, and
African-Americans achieving equality from white U.S. society.
In his efforts, Lieber noted an irony — “People who want to work for peace don’t like to fight — that’s a problem.”
To put the situation in context, he said the peace movement must
succeed because “we believe we’re possibly facing a paroxysm of
violence that will make World War II look like a picnic.”
Regarding Watanabe’s talk and the peace group’s appearances at
UNCA and other locales around the world, Lieber stressed, “We are
absolutely not here to complain about what happened 60 years ago. That
is not the issue.
“We’re only here to warn you about the future, which will be
this (nuclear Armageddon that dwarfs what happened in Japan) if we
don’t change things.”
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