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The Thomas
Merton Center began in a storefront office on the Southside in 1972 to
protest the continuation of the war in Vietnam. Working with a human needs
coalition to reverse federal cutbacks, the Center raised funds for medical
aid to Indochina and for the Bach Mai Hospital, and it provided information
for schools and religious education programs on racism, poverty, and war.
The Center provided seminars on contemplation and nonviolence and on
simplicity in lifestyle, and it celebrated a simple Christmas by supporting
workers in third-world cooperatives with its Giving Tree alternative holiday
shop.
As
Larry Kessler, founder of the Thomas Merton Center, put it in 1973: "We're
trying to get this group [ordinary Americans] to understand that peace and
justice can be a way of life...that it's for everyone..."
During the 1980s, the River City Campaign challenged local nuclear weapons
producers, Rockwell and Westinghouse, with weekly vigils, leaflets, and
civil disobedience actions. They also protested during the construction of
Carnegie Mellon University's Pentagon-funded Software Engineering Institute.
Members of the campaign and Westinghouse officials engaged in two years of
dialogue about the corporation's participation in producing first-strike
nuclear weapons. During that same time period, Pittsburgh delegations
traveled to Nicaragua, Honduras, and El Salvador as part of the Witness for
Peace efforts.

Through the years, the Center has educated and organized against world and
local hunger, exploitation of workers, militarism, and racial discrimination
in Pittsburgh. Members have been arrested protesting the B-1 bomber, nuclear
weapons, and apartheid in South Africa. They have organized fasts and
vigils. The first Pittsburgh chapter of Amnesty International and the
Greater Pittsburgh Community Food Bank were organized by Thomas Merton
Center staff members.
Since the Center's beginning, thousands of people from diverse philosophies
and faiths have found common ground in the nonviolent struggle to bring
about a more just and peaceful world community. Through protest as well as
ongoing projects, the regular involvement of Thomas Merton Center members
has been the backbone of our work. Members and staff of the Center have
supported and initiated many projects that have made tangible differences in
the struggle for social change.
Today, the Thomas Merton Center is located at 5129 Penn Avenue in Garfield
(next door to our old location, 5125 Penn Avenue, pictured to the right) and
has expanded to include over twenty organizing campaigns and projects. It
serves as a valuable resource for dozens of social justice and peace groups
within the region. Our monthly newspaper, The NewPeople, is a key
source of information for activists on current actions, campaigns, and
events. Our website provides an up-to-date action calendar, and we send out
a weekly electronic newsletter to let people know what's going on and how to
get involved.
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