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| Gene Stoltzfus; 1940-2010 |
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FORT FRANCES, ONTARIO: Gene Stoltzfus 1940-2010 – PRESENTE!
Wednesday, 10 March, Christian Peacemaker Team’s founding director
Gene Stoltzfus died of a heart attack in Fort Frances, Ontario while
bicycling near his home on the first spring-like day of the year. He is
survived by his wife Dorothy Friesen and many peacemakers who stand on
the broad shoulders of his 70 years of creative action.
Gene was at the heart of those who planted and nurtured the vision
for teams of peacemakers partnering with local communities in conflict
zones to build justice and lasting peace which has grown into CPT.
Gene played a key roles in CPT's founding gathering of Christian
activists, theologians and other Church leaders at Techny Towers
outside Chicago, IL in 1986.
Two years later Gene became the first staff person of the newly
formed organization and continued as CPT's director for the next 16
years. In the early years, Gene and CPT’s Steering Committee
experimented with various approaches to activate faith-grounded
peacemaking. Through the early 90s, Gene gave leadership to
solidifying the vision and practice of sustained teamwork in situations
of lethal conflict. During the late 90s and early 2000s, he guided CPT
through its growth and maturation as an organization supporting
nonviolent action around the world.
After Gene retired from CPT in 2004 he continued his Christian
peacemaking through nonviolent action, speaking and organizing in the
USA, Canada and around the world. He also spent considerable time in
Fort Frances with Dorothy, where he wrote regular blog entries, worked
for right relations with First Nations communities, and took up
creative artisan endeavors making furniture and jewelry with wood,
twigs and other objects from the woods near his home.
You can read a longer biography of Gene here.
The closing paragraph of Gene’s final post on his blog is an expression of his conviction and hope:
“Every one of us is impacted by a dominant culture which insists
that military or police force will make things right. Every day, that
culture tells us that dirty tricks, usually done in secret, are
required for our survival. After all, it’s argued, someone has to do
this dirty work. It’s called a noble work and the Blackwater
mercenaries are required for the work. It will take an expanding
world-wide but grassroots culture reaching beyond national borders to
fashion a body of Christian peacemakers to be an effective power to
block the guns and be part of transforming each impending tragedy of
war. Little by little there will be change.”
Christian Peacemaker Teams