A
Brief History of WAND
Sayre
Sheldon, October 2004
It was a (somewhat) different
world in the early 1980s, a world that was fertile ground
for organizing. WAND has its roots firmly in that time.
The nuclear arms race was spiraling out of control,
and the specter of a nuclear disaster was dark, real,
and terrifying.
Dr. Helen Caldicott, a
physician from Australia and expert on nuclear disarmament,
traveled the world, speaking to this fear, and galvanizing
citizens to action. When she did so, she was often greeted
with the response: “We must start a women’s
party!” And so Helen, who came from a country
with a multi-party system, founded the Women’s
Party for Survival.
However, the new party,
organized around a kitchen table in Cambridge, MA, quickly
realized they could not take on the entrenched two-party
American system. Instead, the party morphed into WAND
-- just as the Reagan administration began rattling
its sabers and wildly increasing military spending.
In the beginning, the organization
was small and run by volunteers. However, the demand
was great: thousands upon thousands of outraged U.S.
citizens believed that the very future of the planet
was being threatened by the arms race. The organization
moved to become larger and more professional, and to
both educate on policy choices and lobby to make policy.
WAND was structured as
two sister organizations: one educational and supported
by tax-deductible contributions, the other political
and supported by dues from its members. Eventually,
a third program --WAND PAC--was born. The Board of Directors
realized how important it was to endorse candidates
and raise money for their campaigns. (In the 1980s,
as few women were running for Congress, most of the
money went to men. With a dramatic shift in the numbers
of women running for Congress in the 1990s, the PAC
decided to give to WAND and WiLL members running for
Congress.)
For years, it was a heady
time for the organization. Helen, a charismatic speaker,
regularly appeared on major TV programs (e.g., Phil
Donahue’s show), often with well-known celebrities
(e.g., Meryl Streep). When she did, letters poured in
by the thousands. Outraged, citizens begged Helen and
WAND to do something. Helen traveled the country, and
thousands of volunteers rallied. The Peace Movement
and the Nuclear Freeze historically played a role in
the end of the MX missile, and forced nuclear disarmament
summits.
In 1985, WAND opened its
Washington, DC office, forging a link between the grassroots
and Congress. Today, WAND is a major presence within
the peace and security community on Capitol Hill, firmly
established in both the peace and women’s communities.
In 1991, after the Cold
War had wound down, the climate had changed enough so
that WAND changed its name to Women’s Action for
New Directions. The name brought with it a broadened
mission: world peace and security, nuclear disarmament,
and redirecting excessive military spending toward human
and environmental needs.
As the peace movement dwindled,
WAND wisely recognized the need to create a different
kind of grassroots organization, and reached out to
women state legislators. Most women Members of Congress
come from state legislatures. WiLL, the Women Legislators’
Lobby, is a national, non-partisan network of women
state legislators who work together to influence federal
policy and budget priorities. In 2003, we founded Trailblazers,
a network of former legislators whose contacts and influence
continue to have an impact on national priorities and
foreign policy issues.
In 1999, STAND --Students
Taking Action for New Directions -- was created by 13
young women at the biennial WAND/WiLL national conference.
STAND aims to harness and direct the enormous energies
and potential of young women activists.
For the past few years,
WAND has been broadening its circle and building on
relationships with organizations that care about similar
issues. We have established partnerships with organizations
that care about human and environmental needs. We have
forged coalitions with organizations that have struggled
to prevent and stop the war in Iraq. The peace movement
has gathered new strength, and WAND is there to lend
expertise and experience.
Today, WAND is well known
as a force to be reckoned with: professional, knowledgeable,
relentless.
|