Voices of Conscience: Peace Witness in the Great War
Starting date:
Ending date:
Event Details
March 24, 2021 to May 1, 2021
Voices of Conscience: Peace Witness in the Great War is a traveling exhibit that remembers the witness of peace-minded people against the First World War 1914-1918. This witness included men and women, religious believers and secular humanitarians, political protesters and sectarian separatists. They resisted U.S. involvement in the war, the enactment of military conscription, the war bond drives, and the denial of freedom of speech under the Espionage and Sedition Acts. For this resistance many suffered community humiliation, federal imprisonment, and mob violence at the hands of a war-crusading American public. This exhibit lifts up the prophetic insights and the personal courage of World War I peace protesters, and suggests parallels to the culture of war and violence in our world today.
The exhibit is organized in ten themes that encourage exploration and reflection. The theme modules surround a recreation of an Alcatraz Prison cell, the site where Hutterite conscientious objectors were punished for refusing military participation. Text and quotes provide interpretation and raise provocative questions for viewers while large-scale graphics and photomurals immerse visitors in the historical experience of witnessing for peace during “total war.”
A collaborative team of historians and museum professionals developed Voices of Conscience at Kauffman Museum. The exhibit is based on Kauffman Museum’s 30 years of experience in designing and building award-winning projects with a specific focus on innovative approaches to traveling exhibits.
Voices of Conscience: Peace Witness in the Great War is a traveling exhibit developed
by Kauffman Museum, which remembers the narratives of peoples of faith who opposed
the war. The exhibit examines key questions such as:
• Who speaks for peace in times of war?
• What am I willing to fight for?
• What am I willing to die for?
• Is paying for war participating in war?
• How would I respond to violence?
• Who are the voices of conscience today?
Stories of the death of the Hutterite Martyrs of Alcatraz and the tarring and feathering of
Mennonite farmers in Kansas provide examples of stalwart faith in the face of terror perpetrated by war advocates.
For more information visit VoicesOfConscienceExhibit.org
Voices of Conscience: Peace Witness in the Great War
Phone : 620-846-2527 (Always call and confirm events.)
Fax : 620-846-2810
Email Address : stauthm@ucom.net
Web: www.stauthmemorialmuseum.org
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