A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE PEACE AND HUMAN RIGHTS COMMITTEE (PHRC)
OF EASTERN
by
Professor Hope K. Fitz, Director
Originally Written November 28, 2006
October 29, 2007
About eleven years ago, I was speaking with Dr. David Carter, our present
Chancellor of Connecticut State University and past President of Eastern, about
starting a peace group. As I
recall, he said, “Why don’t you start such a group, Hope?”
So Annette Bradstreet, the former secretary of Sociology, Social Work,
and Anthropology, together with some students, started what later became the
“Peace and Human Rights Committee,” PHRC. Annette had been my assistant advisor
to the campus Philosophy Ideas Club, PIC, for nine years, and the few students
who joined us were former PIC members.
One of the students who was active in that group was Asa O’Brien. In
fact, in a few of the first meetings, he and I were the only persons in
attendance. Another student from the PIC, who became very active and later
helped to draft the first proposal for the Peace and Human Rights Center, was
Blerim Rexhaj. He was also a speaker at the Peace Conference which the PHRC
organized in the fall of 2002.
A few months after starting PHRC, President Carter and Vice-President
Dimitrios Pachis invited me to tea where I met Dr. Charles Prewitt.
He is a retired faculty member of Eastern and now teaches courses,
part-time, in the Peace and Human Rights Minor Program.
Charlie, as the PHRC members call Dr. Prewitt, is one of our staunchest
allies and most faithful members.
In fact, he started a foundation, “The Virginia and Charles Prewitt Foundation,”
at Eastern that gives scholarships to students studying peace and human rights.
Several scholarships from the foundation have been awarded to our
students.
At the aforementioned tea, President Carter and Vice President Pachis
told me about a Peace and World Security Conference held each summer that is
directed by Michael T. Klare, the Five College Professor of the Program Peace
and World Security Studies at Hampshire College in Amherst, Massachusetts.
I have since learned that it was Charlie who told the President and Vice
President about the Peace and World Security conference. I attended the
conference that summer and another such conference about two years later.
The Peace and World Security conferences had quite an impact on me, and
because of ideas gathered there, the PHRC held our first conference.
This conference was devoted to issues of human rights. The conference,
called “Human Rights,” took place on Saturday, February 26, 2000.
The PHRC, at that time, included: Professors: Hope Fitz (Philosophy);
Stacy Close (History), Imna Arroyo (Visual Arts), Catherine (Katie) Lynch
(History), and Anna Kirchmann (History); Staff: Annette Bradstreet; Students:
Asa O’Brien, Betsy Lunny, Michael Lunny, Pete Marino, Molly Lynch and Michael
Joyce, and an alumnus, Glen Stefaniak.
The conference was co-sponsored by the ECSU Peace and Human Rights
Committee, the Philosophy Ideas Club and the Dean’s Office of the
Some time after this Human Rights Conference, Charlie Prewitt called to
ask me if we could speak to President Carter about a Peace Institute.
I was enthused, so on November 10, 2000, we wrote a letter to Dr. Carter
telling him what we envisioned. I
remember that in the letter we spoke of Eastern as a future “Beacon of Light”
that would be noted on the East Coast as a place where people could study about
peace.
After receiving our letter, President Carter invited Charley and me to
tea with Vice President Pachis and him.
He was very enthused about our idea and anxious to further our efforts
towards a Peace and
Following Dr. Pettigrew’s suggestions, the committee members immediately
began to talk about a proposal for a peace center.
The committee had grown quite a bit by this time.
Some of the members who were quite active and met regularly included
Professors: Charles (Charlie) Prewitt, William (Bill) Salka; Anna Kirchmann;
Hope Fitz, Margaret (Maggie) Martin, Robert (Bob) Horrocks, Catherine Lynch,
Stacy Close, Gail Gelburd, Andrew (Andy) Nilsson, Mary Kenny, Imna Arroyo, John
Kilburn, Calvin Saxton and Dennis Canterbury. Staff included: Ann Fratoni and
Robin Shefts. Students who were active included Asa O’Brien, Blerim Rexhaj,
Terry Griffin and Jeffrey Scott. At
some point in our writing of the proposal, we decided that what we really wanted
was a Peace and Human Rights Center because without human rights, there can be
no peace.
At the suggestion of Robert (Bob) Horrocks, we wrote a mission statement.
However, after Dr. Pettigrew’s visit to our university, Bob suggested that we
get together at a retreat and write a draft of the proposal for a Peace and
Human Rights Center. We did just
that. On a Saturday, October 13,
2001, several of us met off campus to begin to write our ideas for a Peace and
Human Rights Center. Maggie Martin, assisted by Bob Horrocks, gathered our ideas
and began a rough draft of a proposal for the center.
They went over our ideas with us at least two times before they wrote
what I thought was a great proposal.
On November 9 2002, the PHRC held a peace conference, entitled,
“Perspectives in Peace.” The funding for the conference came from President
David Carter, Vice President Dimitrios Pachis, Dr. Beverley J. Anderson, Dean of
the School of Arts and Sciences, and Dr.Laura Tordenti, Vice President for
Student Affairs. Two years of
planning and a great deal of effort, as well as time, were necessary to bring in
a number of speakers from different parts of the world to speak at our
conference on peace. The members of
the PHRC at this time were: Imna Arroyo, Annettte Bradstreet; Dennis Canterbury;
Stacey Close; Mary Curran; Loretta Forde (a staff member), Hope Fitz; Ann
Fratoni; Gail Gelburd; Robert Horrocks Mary Kenny; John Kilburn; Anna Kirchmann;
Nicole Krassas; Jamaal Lee (a student); Katie Lynch; Maggie Martin; Eunice
Matthews; Joan Meznar; Andrew Nilsson; Charles Prewitt; Blerim Rexhaj; William
Salka, Calvin Saxton; Robin Shefts; and Christopher Vasillopulos. Dr. Pettigrew
was the key-note speaker. The other speakers at the conference were Professors:
Henry Rosemont (See earlier notation.); Brendan McAllister, Director, Mediation
Northern Ireland; Fakhreddin Azimi, Professor of History,
Soon after the conference, Dr. Pettigrew asked if the PHRC members would
like to present their ideas for a Peace and Human Rights Center at the United
Nations. We “jumped at the chance.”
Professor Bill Salka and I presented a brief account of the work that the
PHRC had done on the proposal for a Peace and Human Rights Center.
Also attending this event at the United Nations were Professors: Nicole
Krassas, who had become an active member the year before, Andy Nilsson, John
Kilburn, Maggie Martin and Charlie Prewitt.
We were so pleased with our proposal.
However, when we presented it to Vice President Pachis, we were told that
“money was tight,” and that in order for the Board of Trustees to accept our
proposal, we needed to produce a budget that would show that eventually we could
be self-sustaining. We did that,
but we were told that our budget had to be cut in half. We complied, but still
the proposal was not accepted.
Regarding the requirement that we be self-sustaining, we were aware of
the importance of identifying and writing to funding institutions in order to
solicit funds for our programs, etc.
In fact, at least a year prior to the Peace Conference, Ann Fratoni and
I, with the help of Professor William (Bill) Salka, worked part of one summer
trying to contact national and international funding institutions whom we were
told might be interested in funding our peace conference. We did not write a
grant because we were not a center, but we did write a letter asking for funds.
It was accompanied by a letter from President Carter. Only one funding
institution expressed interest in helping us, but we were not chosen at the
final “cut.”
In order to help us with our efforts regarding a center, around 2004,
Vice-President Pachis suggested that we establish a Peace and Human Rights Minor
and submit a proposal for the minor to the Curriculum Committee. Several of us
worked for over a year on the minor. When it seemed that the proposal was not
advancing fast enough, Charlie spoke with President David Carter about receiving
additional support from the administration.
Shortly thereafter, we received lunches and snacks. In fact, those of us
who worked during the summer of 2005, on the proposal, received lunches whenever
we had a meeting. Those who were key in writing this proposal were: Mary Kenny
who, with the help of Joan Meznar, wrote an original draft, Charlie Prewitt, Ann
Fratoni, Hope Fitz, Nicole Krassas Gail Gelberd, and the student members Adam
Brzozowski, Matt Mucci and Jason Taraskiewicz.
Others who gave of their valuable time and efforts were Robin Schefts,
Maggie Martin, Andy Nilsson, Stacy Close, Bill Salka and Anna Kirchmann.
(Katie Lynch was on Sabbatical Leave for a year.)
The proposal for a minor in Peace
and Human Rights was accepted by the Curriculum Committee in the spring of 2005.
It was presented to the University Senate in the fall of 2005 and
accepted. The core course for Peace and Human Rights has been taught several
times. In fact, Charlie, who is teaching the course this fall, reports that the
class fill each time that it is taught. At last count, I believe there were five
minors in Peace and Human Rights Studies. However, I have had several inquiries
of late from students who would like to take the minor.
After the minor became part of
the curriculum, Maggie Martin, with the assistance of Nicole Krassas,
spearheaded a revision of the proposal for a Peace and Human Rights Center. It
was Vice President Pachis who advised the PHRC that the proposal would have to
be one that was practical in objective and tone and geared not only to the
involvement of students in peace and human rights studies but to their
involvement in community service and outreach. The committee members who were
active in helping with this project are Professors: Maggie Martin, Nicole
Krassas, Hope Fitz, Charlie Prewitt, Gail Gelburd, Katie Lynch, Adam Brzozowski,
and Matt Mucci. The proposal was sent to Dean Carmen Cid and Vice President
Pachis and now it is in the hands of President Elsa Nunez and Vice President
Rhona Free.
In addition to the PHRC members already mentioned, Professor Christopher
Vasillopulos has aided greatly in many of the events that PHRC has organized or
sponsored over the years. He has
especially been helpful by either taking part in or suggesting speakers for
social/political events. In fact, soon after 9/11, Professors Vasillopulos and
Fitz took part in an open session
for students who wanted to talk about the
In addition to the conferences on Human Rights and Peace, the PHRC has organized or helped sponsor many other exciting events (to see those, you may click on the link Past events in our home page please).