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From Reflection to Action: An Interfaith Remembrance of the Trinity Test

  • Santa Maria de la Paz Community Hall 11 College Avenue Santa Fe, NM, 87508 United States (map)

Friends of Pace e Bene Event

Impacted Communities and Religious Leaders Call for Nuclear Abolition

To commemorate the anniversary of the first detonation of an atomic weapon in 1945 at the nearby Trinity Test Site, the complete elimination of nuclear weapons must be prioritized.

“From Reflection to Action: An Interfaith Remembrance of the Trinity Test” will be held at:

Santa Maria de la Paz Community Hall,
11 College Ave, Santa Fe, NM 87508
4:00 pm MT Sunday July 16, 2023

 

This free public event will feature music, speakers, exhibitions, and moments of reflection and prayer. Pre-registration is encouraged, and the event will be live streamed.  

Pre-register: form.jotform.com/ASFPMD/July162023Event

Live stream: youtube.com/watch?v=2EnpL0aDQ1E

Among the scheduled speakers is Most Reverend John C. Wester, Archbishop of Santa Fe. “We can no longer deny or ignore the extremely dangerous predicament of our human family,” says Wester. “We are in a new nuclear arms race even more dangerous than the first, and I believe we need to rejuvenate a sustained, serious conversation about universal, verifiable nuclear disarmament.”

The Archbishop’s call is made more urgent by Putin’s nuclear saber rattling over Ukraine and the failure of nuclear weapons powers to ever honor the 1970 NonProliferation Treaty’s mandate to enter into serious negotiations leading to disarmament. All currently existing nuclear weapons powers are “modernizing” their arsenals to keep nuclear weapons forever. New Mexico is at the center of the U.S. government’s $1.7 trillion modernization plan, specifically with the expanded production of plutonium “pit” bomb cores at the Los Alamos Lab and disposal of resulting radioactive wastes at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant.

Seventy-eight years ago the government didn’t warn or evacuate the estimated tens of thousands of people living within a 50-mile radius of the Trinity Test blast. The detonation produced more heat and light than the sun, generating radioactive ash that fell for days. The communities downwind of the blast saw a spike in infant deaths in the months after the explosion and, generations later, continue to suffer its effects.

“We don’t ask IF we’ll get cancer, we ask WHEN it will be our turn,” says Tina Cordova, event co-organizer and founder of the Tularosa Basin Downwinders Consortium. “The government basically walked away from the people of New Mexico and has taken no responsibility for all the sacrifice, suffering, and the dying.”

Attendees will learn about actions they can take toward a world without nuclear weapons, such as calling on members of Congress to co-sponsor H.Res.77, “Embracing the Goals and Provisions of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons” and joining forces with the grassroots Back from the Brink coalition to spur cities, towns, and counties across New Mexico to adopt resolutions urging the United States to prioritize negotiations with the other eight nuclear-armed states toward the complete elimination of nuclear weapons, and extend and expand victim assistance and environmental remediation related to local nuclear weapons activities.

The event is organized by the Archdiocese of Santa Fe, Soka Gakkai International-USA, Nuclear Watch New Mexico, Tularosa Basin Downwinders Consortium, and United Church of Santa Fe. For more information, call the Archdiocese of Santa Fe’s Office of Social Justice at 505.831.8205.