
The STORY Collaborative to end the war in iraq brings young people together to share our stories and strategize to end the war. From July 7-10 2006 we gathered at the Highlander Center in Tennessee to share our stories, strategize, and deepen the alliance of young Veterans of the war in Iraq, peace and counter-military recruitment activists, young people working for the rights of immigrants, and young members of military families.
Collaborative Report Back HERE! CheckOut our video Blog!
Download the Findings -- We Are the Ones We've Been Waiting For: Youth Voices on the Future of the Anti-war Movement, a 6 page summary of our work at Highlander.
The Collaborative Convergence! Together, youth and young Iraq veterans are gathered at the Highlander Center in Tennessee to strengthen our work to end this war and demilitarize our future. This intensive strategy retreat is a project of smartMeme STORY Program (Strategy, Training & Organizing Resources 4 Youth), War Resisters League, Iraq Veterans Against the War, and Student/Farmworker Alliance.
Just after our nations’ 230th birthday, just after the number of US service people killed in Iraq has climbed to over 2,500, we are came together to strategize, revitalize and strengthen the work to end the war, and bring our friends, families, class mates, and loved ones home from Iraq for good. Together at the historic Highlander Center, site of key leadership gatherings of the Civil Rights movement in the 50's + 60s, we were reconnecting with our roots in the movements against racism, militarism, and greed —as well as working to re-imagine what “the peace movement” looks like in the 21st century. We are the echo-boom, Millennial generation, and we are working for peace using new media, storytelling, cultural work, and organizing.
We are students, war resisters, veterans, artists, visionaries, music makers, bloggers, bike riders, baristas, and storytellers. We are part of military families. We are part of immigrant families. We are working class, middle class, multi-racial, Muslim, Jew, catholic, secular, from the cities and the country, from the north and south...We're all that (and more!) We are the new face of the peace movement, and we are getting together to talk business, talk strategy, share our stories, make music, create and collaborate to end the war in Iraq!
We Are the Ones We’ve Been Waiting For…
Youth Voices on the Future of the Anti-War Movement
What happens when Iraq veterans and youth & student peace leaders gather to strategize on ending the war?
[You can download this doc HERE]
From July 7-10 2006, young members of Iraq Veterans Against the War and Military Families Speak Out, student peace leaders, youth organizers and antiracist activists from across the nation came together at the Highlander Center in rural Tennessee. This magical spot—with its long history of nurturing strategies and leadership for the Civil Rights movement, union work and other struggles—became a site of profound alliance building, strategic conversation and insight about the future of the anti-war movement.
We shared meals, campfire songs and stories: about where we were on 9/11, on March 20th 2003, on November 3rd 2004, key moments in our young political lives. We shared stories from time served in the military in Iraq, from the Zapatista’s “Otra Campaña,” from post-Katrina organizing in New Orleans, to accounts of kicking recruiters off campus, to what we organized on February 15th 2003. We had conversations about the big stuff: alliance building, organizing, racism, burnout, faith, and our futures….we talked and talked, often till the dawn broke over the Smoky Mountains. And we worked together at the task of developing generational strategies to end the War in Iraq and to demilitarize our future.
This Collaborative was convened by STORY (Strategy, Training and Organizing Resources for Youth), the youth program of smartMeme, a multi-issue holistic strategy and training organization. The STORY Collaborative To End the War in Iraq was designed to build relationships and strengthen a peer network of young adults (representing more than 25 organizations) who can innovate, experiment, develop strategies, and support each other in building the US anti-war movement for the long haul. Iraq Veterans Against the War, War Resisters League, and Student/Farmworker Alliance were the STORY Collaborative partner organizations.
I) STORY Collaborative Frameworks
The STORY Collaborative was convened because the voices of young people are crucial in strategy development, and building shared stories deepens our relationships and thus our movement. In January 2006, smartMeme was approached by several of our youth led partner groups who felt they needed space to address the deep strategy and alliance building questions that are central to stopping the Iraq war and changing the direction of US foreign policy. The STORY Collaborative to End the War in Iraq was born, and was convened with two over arching and interrelated frameworks at its core: Alliance Building and Story-Based Strategy.
1. Alliance Building For Movement Building
We worked to find our common ground through the principle of Alliance Building for Movement Building. Riffing off of the “Alliance Building Frameworks” model developed by the Movement Strategy Center we accepted that “to build a movement we have to think outside of our organizations and coalitions,” and to “start where you agree and work your way out.”
The STORY Collaborative specifically brought together 3 key sectors, crudely lumped as follows: 1. Young members of military families, conscientious objectors, and young Iraq veterans against the war 2. Young people working for the rights of immigrants and doing anti-violence, demilitarization, and counter recruitment work in low-income areas and communities of color 3. Young people and students working in the traditional, mostly white, “peace movement.”
2. Story Based Strategy
This second framework came from smartMeme’s work on “story-based strategy.” Story-based strategy places storytelling at the center of social change by linking movement building with an analysis of the narratives that structure power. The current administration has used narrative power to deceive and manipulate; their story of the War on Terror (WMDs, democratization, etc.) and various re-branding efforts for their occupation of Iraq are unraveling stories that are increasingly seen as lies.
SmartMeme’s strategy work in the realm of narrative is based on the premise that stories are central to how humans understand the world, and thus stories are embedded with power--both the power to justify the status quo and the power to make change imaginable and necessary. A “narrative power analysis” unmasks the assumptions that operate behind the dominant stories in our culture(s). While storytelling is an ancient practice and a cornerstone of any great organizing campaign, the story-based strategy framework refines this practice in the context of 24/7 news cycles and an age of information saturation, and applies “meme” theory to the present social change context. Story-based strategies aim to change the stories through integrated organizing, messaging, and campaigning.
The STORY Collaborative started from the premise that an organizing strategy to stop the war must reclaim our stories, call out the war maker’s make-believe stories, and craft new narratives about peace and a future worth fighting for. Then we asked, “What’s our story?” The story-based strategy approach centered storytelling as a key element of the Collaborative’s strategizing and alliance building work.
II) STORY Collaborative Findings: Sparks to Light Many Fires
1. Sharing Our Stories Builds Strong Alliances
The first finding is that the two frameworks are profoundly linked and powerful when used in harmony with one another. Sharing our stories brings us together in deeper relationship and alliance. Our stories matter: we come into this work as whole people – with different histories, experiences, scars, stories, and ideas. We have different relationships with the war in Iraq and with the history of US imperialism. Understanding our own histories and location in relationship to the war is essential, and making space to share these stories is movement-building work. The intersection of story-based strategy and alliance building is a key lesson for our STORY Collaborative model.
2. Challenging White Supremacy and Oppression In Our Movements
As the Peoples’ Institute for Survival and Beyond explains in their Principles of Antiracist Organizing: Racism is the single most critical barrier to building effective coalitions for social change and Militarism must be recognized as applied racism. It is the force that maintains the current imbalance of power.
A lack of shared analysis of how White Supremacy operates, in the system of militarism and inside our anti-war movement, is holding us back. We must critically analyze this war within a historical context of imperialism and colonization through a racial and gendered lens, and understand it as structural violence and systemic oppression – in Iraq and in our communities. We are inside the system of racism, and must actively work to challenge it in our lives and practice. Building a “culture of strategy” in our movements is building what Dr. Martin Luther King called a “beloved community” in our movements- a community that actively works to undo racism with love, struggle, and solidarity.
3. Creative Communication! New Words, Memes & Mediums for Changing Times

The Collaborative struggled with the terms “peace movement” and “anti-war movement.” They are movements we proudly inherit, but there was much discussion of a holistic approach to ending this war calling for another name. While we believe in peace, the word has been stolen from us and given new meanings. To paraphrase Dr. King, peace must be not just the absence of conflict, but also the presence of justice. We were hungry for new words to name our approach, and new symbols and icons to communicate our vision. What do we call a holistic, multi-issue, de-militarization movement, that collaborates at the intersections of peace and justice in 2006? What does this look like in images? Sound like in songs? What mediums do we use to share our story (podcasting, YouTubing, blogging etc.)?
4. Solidarity with Iraq Veterans and Military Families
The role of Iraq Veterans and Military Families is critical, and other sectors of the peace movement need to support the development of these organizations and their leaders. Relationships and trust need to be developed between members of these organizations and other anti-war individuals. Bridging strategies need to be examined by anti-war activists in order to effectively work in concert with the diversity of people who are against the Iraq war, and undertake the development of tactical plans that incorporate everyone’s voice and ideas, especially Iraq Vets and their families.
5. (Counter) Recruiting for Movement Building: Out of Iraq, A Future Free of War
Counter Recruitment work is an important grassroots, youth based strategy, and needs the support of the traditionally white-peace-and-justice-Baby-Boomer set. That support must be given in a collaborative way, and a way that empowers young people, particularly young people of color, to do the peer-to-peer work of offering another vision, and actual alternatives, to high-school age youth. We need to be doing more than saying, “The recruiters are lying!” We need to be speaking and manifesting our truth, and offering young people options for another way to pursue dreams…another story to believe in and belong to as part of the broader peace movement.
What if we went to local businesses, farms, non-profits, and schools and asked people, “Are you against the Iraq War?” And if they say yes, asking, “Would you give a young person who is considering joining the service a job/apprenticeship/internship, or even afternoon of your time to talk about how you got where you are today, without having to serve in an illegal war?”
What if we networked these young people and community leaders together, and started to make a political statement that we want to build opportunities for our youth that keep them home and out of harms’ way in Iraq? The peace movement can undertake a program of mutual mentorship at the community level, and explicitly understand this is anti-war work. This can include local peace activists creating directories of potential college scholarships, job training programs, alternative education, potential mentors, as well as recruiting young people towards alternatives like healing spaces of dance, art, spoken work, writing, farming—places to connect, to share their stories, be validated, and build community. The Collaborative found a lot of synergy around this vision for demilitarizing our generation.
6. Healing: Moving Our Grief Into Hope and Action
Iraq Veterans Against War operates on the idea that you have to be well in order to be effective in ending the war. For many Iraq veterans and military family members, healing is often what brings them to peace work. In working together, they build a family with each other, connect with people who truly understand their experience and can give them guidance and advice in their healing and activist work. These Veterans and military family members have created and developed a way to move their grief into action and do the work as a way to survive. Their peace work is a form of collective healing.
Veteran or civilian, we are all grieving the state of this world in our own ways. Grief is a process we don’t have to do alone! As young activists, we at the Collaborative shared a sense that when we work overtime and lose our sense of wonder and hope for actualizing change, we can burn out. This means we need to work in ways that are strategic and effective, as well as nurturing. If we can channel our grief together we can transform that energy into action. We recognize that you have to be well in order to be effective in ending the war and that healing work is integral to organizing.
7. Intergenerational Solidarity & Mutual Mentorship: We Need Each Other!
This struggle is like a relay race--you run as far as you can, and then
you pass the stick on.
--- Lena Taylor, Mississippi Association of State Employees
We 20-somethings came of age as the Internet exploded, the World Trade Center collapsed and the War on Terror went prime time on 300 channels. This is our world.
We ask our elders in the progressive community and peace movement to offer us your solidarity. Tell us your stories, and offer us your trust. Let us take the risks we need to take – these times demand it of us. Support us as leaders, listen to our stories, ask us what we think about antiwar strategy, and what we are doing to work for peace.
To our elders, we ask you to support us, mentor us, push us, work with us. We need to work through ageism together in a process of collaboration and mutual mentorship.
To our peers, we say that we are all carrying a lot of weight on our shoulders, and we can carry the load easier when we work together. The world is in trouble, and no one is going to fix it for us. We’ve got to get each other’s back, support each other’s struggles, and step forward together.
It is time for us to take risks. Its time for us to claim our space. We see the STORY Collaborative retreat at Highlander as a hearth fire burning, our campfire as a literal epicenter, that can offer flame to light many fires everywhere, in the imaginations and hearts of young people who dream of a better world of peace and justice. We offer you these sparks….
You are the ones you’ve been waiting for…
III) Next Steps for the STORY Collaborative
Members of the STORY Collaborative are currently working on producing videoblogs and podcasts for distribution on the web about our time together in Highlander.
♣ Check out our video-blog at youTube
♣ Become our myspace friend!
Coming out of the STORY Collaborative, there was lots of energy to work on the Not Your Solider project and cultivate a national network of counter-recruitment leaders, and local and national directories of alternatives to the military. Meanwhile, MFSO and IVAW are also mobilizing to the polls with the rallying cry “Out of Iraq or Out of Office!” The STORY Collaborative crew will continue to be in networked relationship on specific projects and campaigns, as well as the larger task of anti-war strategy development. But we need your support to keep logs on this fire!
* The STORY Collaborative needs your support TODAY. Your contribution can keep this Collaborative of young leaders strategizing and working together for peace. It is you who are the “funders” of the peace movement. Your $5 - $500 can help us carry this work forward. Please give at http://www.smartmeme.com
IV) Many Thanks To:
• All friends and family who offered monetary solidarity to make the Highlander retreat, and getting our ‘peeps to TN possible!
• Collaborative core partners: Iraq Veterans Against the War, War Resisters League, Student/Farmworker Alliance!
• Celia Alario and the crew at Sir, No Sir!
• The Funding Exchange , for an emergency grant of $1,000 towards the costs of this gathering
• All the awesome cooks and other folks at Highlander!
• Our dynamo facilitation team: Kenny Bailey from the Design Studio 4 Social Intervention, Doyle Canning from smartMeme, Xiomara Castro from Arts in Action and the Ella Baker Center, and Maryrose Dolezal from the Nonviolent Youth Collective of the Fellowship of Reconciliation.
• All the young bright wonderful peacemakers who participated in the Collaborative
• Everyone who has supported and believed in smartMeme’s vision and work…
V) About smartMeme: Changing the Story
The smartMeme Strategy and Training Project was founded in 2002 to support struggles for justice, peace, democracy and ecological sanity. We develop and apply narrative power analysis and story-based strategies to build grassroots movements for change. SmartMeme is a non-profit collective of people of who believe in imagination, organizing, creative action and the power of stories to change the world for the better. We bring combined decades of experience in grassroots movements, as well as training the fields of advertising, advocacy, organizing, film & broadcast, ecology, and education.
STORY (Strategy, Training & Organizing Resources 4 Youth) is smartMeme’s youth training, leadership, and movement building program. In the last four years, smartMeme has conducted over 100 trainings and workshops for thousands of grassroots activists all over the US. Through our curriculum, strategy consulting, facilitation, and the story-based strategy framework, we work to nurture a culture of strategy in grassroots social change movements. We think our times demand we be better strategists, build bigger movements, and tell better stories.
SmartMeme is a national strategy center for holistic movement building, and a one-stop-shop for movement based strategy consultation, messaging, meeting planning and facilitation, communications and design.
Visit us at www.smartmeme.com | 415- 255- 9133
Organizations, Places and Projects represented @ the STORY Collaborative to End the War, Highlander Center, July 7-9
Art in Action
Oakland, California
Catalyst Project
San Francisco, California
The Design Studio for Social Intervention
Boston, Mass.
Ella Baker Center: Let’s Get Free
Oakland, California
Future 5000
Iraq Veterans Against War
Serrasota, Florida
Iowa City, Iowa
Los Angeles, California
San Francisco, California
Southern Illinois University, Illinois
Lancaster Coalition for Peace and Justice
Lancaster, Pennsylvania
League of Pissed Off Voters
Military Families Speak Out
Rhode Island
Washington D.C.
National Youth and Student Peace Coalition
New Hampshire American Friends Service Committee
Concord, New Hampshire
North Carolina Peace and Justice Coalition
North Carolina
Projecto Caribean Paz
San Juan, Puerto Rico
smartMeme’s STORY Program: Strategy, Training and Organizing Resources for Youth
Burlington, Vermont
San Francisco, CA
Students Against War
UC Santa Cruz, California
Student Farmworker Alliance
Immokalee, Florida
Student Peace Action Network
Washington D.C.
Tierra y Libertad
Tucson, Arizona
War Resisters League
New York City, New York
Plus: Check out our Blog
Here are some of the stories from the Iraq Collaborative organizers and participants! Hey STORY Collaborative 'peeps, share your own stories here.
LOVELLA CALICA: IRAQ VETERANS AGAINST WAR/ STORY Board, Phiadelphia, PA
I see, hear, feel so many people having realizations, break-throughs, epiphanies, those moments when some things click in their brain and they say, “ah hah” or “yeah” or “hmmm” those golden moments when we are moving forward. when we are pushed by someone, when we are open to growth and change. It is an inspiring feeling and I’m excited for many more. I also wanted to point out that we sometimes get so caught up in process, in asking what we’ll do when x happens or planning and getting agreement from everyone. It doesn’t leave space for one to take risks and be courageous and really create change.
-Lovella
I just keep being reminded and seeing that struggle is such an important part of growth and working together. Those uncomfortable moments, pushing yourself to say what you feel, to respond to what someone said, the tension. it’s all so powerful.
-Lovella
LIZ FREDERICK: MILITARY FAMILIES SPEAK OUT Washington D.C.
Amateur Poetry at Highlander
I will leave from this space with
affirmation that despite death, destruction, and anger
there is also life, renewal, and hope.
There is purpose in our work
and reason to be proud
This place is a reminder that we are not
the first to have struggled
Nor will we be the last.
But I move forward from this space
embracing my responsibilities
To this nation
To this world
To continue this journey
and leave this space, this earth
better than how I entered it
-Liz
IVAN BROIDA: PROJECTO CARIBEAN PAZ San Juan, Puerto Rico
30 amazing people with 30 stories that each connected make infinite stories that make one BIG story. our story. after all the talking and all the clashing and the dancing, singing, meeting, playing, eating, (not) sleeping, in beautiful Highlander Center in Tennessee, i am hopeful that we will put an end to this and all wars. i am also hopeful that all the conversations will lead to a different way of living; a more just, more peaceful, more fun life.
a lot of things are in the works, a lot of people have made deep connections, and more importantly, it does NOT stop here. this is the beginning in some ways and the continuation in many others of years and years of peace work.
i am grateful for having had this opportunity to meet and connect and create a new story with the folks that work tirelessly day in and day out. we took all the challenges that were thrown at us (after all, ending the war is not easy) and worked creatively to start something that will lead to many other somethings.
-ivan
Never been to TN before, so its good to know that I'll be among friends. The STORY Collaborative is going to be good times, and I am really excited to be meeting, sharing, plotting, and partying with y'all. See you soon.
Hey STORY Collaborative'peeps...
Here are some inspiring words coming out of the his/herstory of the Highlander Center ...
Founded in 1932 in Monteagle, TN, by Myles Horton and Don West, and relocated in New Market, TN in 1972, Highlander Research and Education Center has always been dedicated to the belief that working-class people can learn to take charge of their lives and circumstance. As aptly stated in the title to Myles Horton's autobiography, Highlander has been in the struggle for social justice and participatory democracy for The Long Haul (Horton 1990). The praxis at Highlander is guided by a concern for social justice and an understanding of the need to reorient society from an autocratic, authoritarian bias, to an egalitarian, participatory democracy. Horton believed that the reason Highlander has been so successful is ". . . that you have to trust the people, you have to love the people, and you have to care for the people. You have to practice what you preach with people" (Conti and Fellenez, 1986:15). As a central location in which marginal groups carry on the struggle for a democratic society, and as a well-known place of resistance, Highlander offers insights into many of the principles of popular education.
The power comes from the people, and when you get a person sufficiently oppressed, they're going to rise. It's just like you put a kettle on the fire and put an airtight cover on it and flame underneath--after awhile it's going to explode, and it's go ing to have an effect.
Elizabeth Cousins Rogers, lifelong activist, New Orleans, LA
Southern Exposure, Vol. X, No. 2, March/April, 1982, p. 20
This struggle is like a relay race--you run as far as you can, and then you pass the stick on.
Lena Taylor, Mississippi Association of State Employees, Jackson, MS
Southern Exposure, Vol. XVII, No. 1, p. 8
Sally Mae Hadnott, community organizer and president, Autauga County NAACP, Prattville, AL
Southern Exposure, Vol. IV, No. 4, p. 22
I am so very thrilled and honored to be meeting all of you soon in TN, learning more about your stories and visions for ending the war, and reconnecting with the roots at the Highlander Center. We have come down a long road and we stand on the shoulders of giants--at a cross roads as the younger generation, facing down the agendas of empire and the profittering war machines...and so we have new roads to make together...so let's get walking! See you at Highlander!
~Doyle, smartMeme collective/STORY Program
Hey everyone! Just wanted to try out this blog and also offer this amazing video about police brutality in Mexico. I found it intriguing. Let me know if you have ever been in a situation like that or just your thoughts on the event. Peace!
http://salonchingon.com/cinema/otra_canal6atenco.php?city=ny