yZ41 No 23 pe no.l THE CHRISTIAN FRONT eace Leaflet No. 1 CATHOLIC YOUTH AND WORLD PEACE by Elizabeth Sweeney Executive Secretary... Catholic Association for International Peace Washington, D. Cu pe ey : ANVECRCITY OF ILLINO?: To the youth of the world, and to the guardians of youth as well, should the question of World Peace be most important and especially to those who are members of a Faith universal—a Faith founded by the Prince of Peace. The present threatening world crisis and the trend of excessive nationalism in practically all of the great countries, the glorification of national pride and haughti- ness, and the ever-increasing national hatreds and preju- dices are a serious threat to international harmony. With the horrors of 1914-1918 still blackening the memory of this generation, intolerance and violence are striving for the ascendancy. The tragedies of war fall directly on youth and indirectly on all those with whom youth is associated. This movement, as are all movements sub- versive of true peace, is alien to the doctrine and prin- ciples of the Universal, the Catholic Church, whose pur- pose is that all men may call one another brother and be saved. Peace education and action on the part of young Cath- olic men and women are necessary if these principles on World Peace are to be made articulate. Rapid trans portation and quick communication enable us to learn more quickly about others, help them and be helped by them. We are united by a supra-national faith that sur- mounts barriers of race and color and are members of the Mystical Body of Christ—a Body so intensely one that injury to one of its members affects every other member—and we are in duty bound to be one with those of other lands. We in a new country, proud of our new institutions, are open to this fault. Therefore, homes, schools of all grades, the pulpit, the press, organizations of all sorts, and particularly youth, are urged to take account of and meet this need of the people of the United States so that we shall be better able to do our part in avoiding war and preserving peace. Of the very substance of this is the difference between patriotism and that national egotism which is now called nationalism. The national egotist thinks that his country is always and in all respects right in its dealing with others. This is not Catholic teaching. If the four hundred million and more Catholics in the wcrld today were to heed the call of Pope Pius XI and his predecessors and further the will to international peace and friendship, the menace of war which now walks abroad would be immeasurably lessened. The responsi- g-ility for wars in the future rests mainly on the shoulders of those who will direct the thoughts of tomorrow. Their efforts in this respect cannot be too great, too earnest, to meet adequately the requirements of Catholic doctrine. It is true that most people do not desire war for them- selves, but the inarticulate will to peace of individuals, uniformed as to practical issues, is helpless before the organized forces of pride and greed. If youth is hesitant to promote world peace out of motives of justice and charity, let it come to this con- clusion by being shown that wars are futile and highly organized rackets in which it is the victim. Let it read The Cross of Peace by Gibbs, Merchants of Death by Hanighen and Engelbrecht, Blood, Iron and Profits by Seldes, Testament of Youth by Brittain, the recent start- ling realistic story, Blood Lust, by Hervey Allen, the findings of the Nye Committee on Munitions, or ponder over the gruesome illustrations in Laurence Stallings’ The First World War, if it would know that it is not always “glorious and sweet to die for one’s country.” Let war be stripped of its pomp and pageantry, of its patriotic emotionalism, of its stirring martial airs and its glamorous uniforms—all vicious opiates to dull the minds of youth to the realization of a needless sacrifice. Let youth see what happens when a nation goes to war. First, millions of men are taken away from their everyday work of producing food, shelter and clothing, and thrust into the army. Millions of other workers are turned from productive employment and set to work arming and equipping and feeding the parasitical army. Work and business and life are turned upside down, and the whole energies of the nation are directed with utter ruth- lessness to bloodshed and destruction. Let our young people whose opinions on war are still unformed visit the soldiers’ hospitals and insane asylums or see the realism depicted in such plays as Journey’s End, Bury the Dead or Testament of Drums. Here will they learn truths not revealed in the glowing annals of super- patriotic societies whose pomp and pageantry blind youth to its horror and brutality. Innumerable stories have filled our newspapers following the recent distribution of the Bonus Bonds. We need not go beyond our own com- munity to read of the tragic accounts of soldiers unable to sign for them because of blindness, paralysis of the arms or because they had no arms at all, not to mention the thousands whose mental condition prevented their even knowing that there was a Bonus. Now, all this has to be paid for. The government borrows money and spends it as fast as it can in destroy- ing food, shelter and clothing, and in killing as many as possible. The money is spent quickly and borrowed back again, and spent again to further the carnage. The process is repeated as long as the war lasts. And after all the money is spent what is there to show for it but ruined factories and farms, flooded mines, wrecked homes, sin, desolation, starvation and death—and on top of that a huge debt which we cannot pay and which, if it is ever paid, must be saddled on our children and their children. Let us visualize for a moment, if we can, what the war meant and still means. Nearly 10,000,000 were killed; more than 16,000,000 seriously wounded; about 14,000,000 otherwise wounded, and several millions are still missing. The cost was nearly $338,000,000,000. If we could have tossed this money into the sea, it would of course have been much better, but the fact is that we must double this amount, since all the money was spent not to create wealth but to destroy what we had—and our lives with it. We burned the candle at both ends. A German mathematician has estimated that enough money was spent in the war to buy a $2,500 home in a five-acre plot for every family in the United States, Can- ada, Australia, England, Belgium, France, Russia, and Germany, and in addition to provide a hospital, uni- versity and schools, including salaries of teachers, nurses, doctors, and professors, for every group of 20,000 people. But instead of this prosperity, what have we? The car- toonist Talburt, in the Washington News, who depicted the unemployed man selling apples on a mountain of wrecked armaments has caught something of the vision. And yet, unless we are widely travelled and have a comprehensive grasp of world affairs, we can have no inkling of what it all means. And the end is not yet; we have yet to see what will come out of the war, what it has meant to man to ignore the everlasting words of Christ in the Sermon on the Mount, when He said: “Blessed are the Peace-makers for they shall see God.” The disturbed condition of the world today makes the danger of further war imminent. And back of it all is the struggle for markets, since our industrial systems do not enable people to consume enough of the goods that they make, and through human avarice we make much of the wrong kind of goods. All the nations must sell heavily abroad, while their own people have not sufficient food, shelter, and clothing. Hence, the conflict. Social justice as set forth in the insistent teaching of the Church is the only means of submerging this conflict and making for national and international friendship and stability. Civilization could not weather another war in the near future on a large scale. And what is more, military experts assure us that mere flesh and blood will not dare show itself above ground in the next war, even hundreds of miles behind the front, and below ground it will not be safe. Thoughts such as these suggest themselves today to all of us and especially to youth upon whom the burden of war will fall. In spite of all that has been done since 1918, the con- clusion cannot be escaped that peace between nations is far from being assured. Many of the conditions of inter- national enmity which brought on the last war are un- changed. The daily press is our best proof of this fact. War and the danger of spread of war are in the fore- ground. Political, economic and cultural life appears still to be unprepared to cope with the problem of keeping the peace in a world grounded in rivalry. What is most important of all and is of the substance of all the rest, the nations are not yet willing to avow Christ and His Kingship over the world. For those who love justice and charity and hate iniquity, one conclusion from this is inevitable. It is, as far as time and abilities allow, to learn what needs to be done to keep the peace of the world and then courageously to do what the needs demand. Here is a task not only for the young but also for those who are responsible for their welfare. In these days of unjust wars of aggression far better that the names of Catholic youth be inscribed on the list of conscientious objectors than on the bronze memorial tablets adorning the college libraries, the city halls and other public places. It is much nobler for youth to live and fight the present battle for justice and charity than to die in order that the greed of rulers and international bankers may be satisfied and the coffers of the munition manufacturers filled. Those of us who had the good fortune—or perhaps the bad fortune—to see small white crosses stretching out over the fields of France and Bel- gium, or who came in daily contact on both sides of the Atlantic with hundreds of young American lads maimed physically or mentally for life, have seen the other side of war and know its futility. Yet it is not because of these that Catholic yduth should be the leaders in the peace movement today. Convine- ing as these facts are in themselves, there are higher and worthier motives that should cause leadership among them. To Catholic youth this problem should have an especial appeal. It must learn that war is never justified until means of peace are tried and found wanting. It must know that most wars and international conflicts center now, directly or indirectly, in the national pride of peoples, in questions of control over raw materials and markets for finished goods, and in access of peoples to work and livelihood in regions where higher standards of living are possible. These problems must be solved and solved now. Yet we lay emphasis upon peaceful means of settling serious conflicts which arise from such problems rather than upon the problems themselves. 341, C2 pe. po. ft Let us note what Pope Leo XIII says in his Encyclical Son the Reunion of Christendom, “Inexperienced youths are removed from parental direction and control to be Sthrown amid the dangers of the soldier’s life; robust “= young men are taken from agriculture, or ennobling So studies or trades, or the arts, to be put under arms. “< Hence the treasures of the states are exhausted by the enormous expenditures, the national resources are frit- tered away, and private fortunes impaired, and thus armed peace which now prevails cannot last much longer. Can this be the normal condition of human society?” Catholics in the United States, and youth above all, should do more than their numerical share to prevent another world war. Our citizenship, influenced by our moral obligation to justice and charity, calls upon us to act. Catholic youth is urged to extend Catholic Action and the knowledge of right principles in order to abolish enmity, to create a true love of peace and a willingness to spread it throughout the world. In his Christmas Al- locution, Pope Pius XI in speaking of world peace says: “Here then is found a vast and glorious field for all the Catholic laity, whom we unceasingly call upon and ask to share in the hierarchical apostolate. To Catholics of all the world, and particularly those who study, labor and pray in Catholic Action, we turn today with this warm invitation and plea. May they all unite in the peace of Christ in a full concord of thoughts and emo- tions, of desires and prayers, of deeds and words—the spoken word, the written word, the printed word—and then an atmosphere of genuine peace, warming and beneficent, will envelop all the world.” Let youth re- spond to this appeal. It is encouraging to know that active efforts have been made to give voice to this will to peace. More and more, intelligent young Catholics are grouping themselves not only to study the Church’s doctrine on peace and war and its application to the frequently serious international questions confronting their countries, but to disseminate this knowledge and promote understanding and good- will among others. The inclusion of courses on interna- tional relations in the curricula of many colleges, the correlation of the principles of peace with the study of . philosophy, law, economics, history, etc., the growth of ~ International Relations Clubs in Catholic colleges (now numbering sixty-eight), and the increase in Student Peace »Conferences and of Youth Study Groups on world ques- tions throughout the country are hopeful signs in the right direction. The Catholic Association for International Peace has made a hopeful move in this direction. At a recent meet- ing in New York representatives from Catholic colleges and Newman Clubs were called together to form the Student Peace Federation of the C. A. I. P. The response wc of these young students was stimulating and constructive. Groups interested in world peace in the various institu- tions are to be federated on a regional basis with a Faculty Adviser in charge of each area. A year-round program based on the Catholic principles in international problems set forth in the twenty-seven pamphlets with their sup- plementary N. C. W. C. Study Outlines will be fol- lowed and a general meeting of the Faculty Advisers and student representatives held annually. There are manifold suggestions to be offered today to youth and to those who are responsible for their future especially in regard to the present world crisis and Cath- olic teaching on the matters involved. Only by a careful and constant study of the causes of such crises and of the eradication of these causes can there be any hope of international accord. Effective action for world peace must be preceded by a genuine knowledge of the facts involved. A thorough study of the material mentioned above on world questions in books, periodicals, pamphlets, the press, both secular and Catholic, is recommended. Encouragement of able lecturers on international affairs is needed as well as preparation of ourselves for dissem- ination of Catholic international views through both the press and the lecture platform. Creation of small study clubs on world problems, formation of international clubs in the university of college, inclusion of courses on international relations in the college curriculum, setting aside a section in the library for peace literature, and arranging for peace de- bates, conferences, plays and pageants are effective means to further right thinking and action on our relation and obligation to the agencies of international life. Pope Benedict XV in his letter to the belligerents, August 1917, proposed that “. . . moral right be substituted for the material force of arms in the reciprocal dealings of nations; the nations enter upon a just agreement for the simultaneous and reciprocal reduction of armaments; armed force be replaced by the noble and peaceful insti- tution of arbitration.” To Catholic youth the question of world peace should have an especial appeal particularly because it is endowed with a faith and a philosophy that know neither racial nor national boundaries. With it rests the solution of today’s and tomorrow's problem—whether we shall live in a world torn by strife born of greed and selfishness or in a werld where man may live in harmony with his Creator—the Prince of Peace—and his fellow-man. REPRINTED FROM: THE CHRISTIAN FRONT Villanova, Pa. Subscription $1.00 yearly