About

A Trans-border Caravan for Peace and Justice with the Poet and Peace Leader Javier Sicilia

More than 60,000 people have been killed in drug violence in Mexico in the last few years. 10,000  people have been disappeared and over 160,000 displaced. Global Exchange and Mexico’s Movement for Peace with Justice and Dignity (MPJD) led by Javier Sicilia have made “End the Drug  War- No More Violence” campaign a priority in 2012. Starting in August, a high profile caravan will cross the US starting in San Diego/Los Angeles, heading east along the US-Mexico border and then up to Chicago, New York and DC.

Sicilia’s son, Juan Francisco was murdered along with six friends on a fateful night in March of  2011. He has since become an inspirational voice for peace, justice and reform– drawing huge  crowds throughout Mexico. He comes north this summer with a call for change in the bi-national  policies that have inflamed a six-year Drug War, super-empowered organized crime, corrupted  Mexico’s vulnerable democracy, claimed lives and devastated human rights on both sides of the border.

2012 offers a uniquely fertile moment to internationalize the struggle for peace in Mexico. Latin American elite opinion is shifting rapidly on the question of ending drug prohibition. This call for reform has not yet echoed in the United States. The Caravan represents an unprecedented effort by Mexican civil society to impact U.S. thinking and policy.

A Cross-Border Caravan for Peace

The Movement for Peace and Justice with Dignity (MPJD), Sicilia’s organization, has prioritized a U.S. Caravan, requesting Global Exchange –a long trusted U.S. partner– to organize the advance work, as well as lead the logistics of the Caravan.

The Caravan represents one element of a broad strategy responding to Mexico’s violent national emergency resulting from Drug War policies (in Mexico and the U.S.) gone tragically wrong. The idea of the Caravan is to make Mexico’s national emergency tangible in the United States and to create a platform where those affected by the Drug War from Mexico, the U.S. and elsewhere can join their voices to inform public opinion on both sides of the border.

The U.S. Caravan’s mission is:

  • To shine a light on the crisis of Drug War violence, impunity and human rights atrocities that are rending Mexico’s social fabric;
  • To make the connections between the impacts of the Drug War in Mexico (violence, deaths and rise of organized crime) and in the U.S. (criminalization, incarceration, and life-long marginalization- disproportionately affecting African-American and Latino communities);
  • To promote a civil society discourse with the American public and opinion leaders about the policies (easy access to assault weapons, militarization of drug enforcement and U.S. prohibition policies) at the root of the crisis; 2
  • • To foster collaboration and effective solidarity among a broad range of North American;
  • Progressive, grassroots, religious, humanitarian and other organizations; and
  • To leave, in the Caravan’s wake, informed, organized, and mobilized communities of activists who will pursue reform strategies in the near and long-term on both sides of the border.

The Caravan takes place at a politically charged moment. It begins in San Diego, six weeks after Mexico’s July 1 presidential election and arrives in Washington, D.C. in September, six weeks prior to the U.S. elections. This summer we will bring communities together around events large and small, turning awareness into action and building a movement that will continue pushing for changes at the local, state, national and international level long after the Caravan has passed through.

The Peace Caravan Route and Plan

The Caravan of buses, private vehicles and RVs, will begin the month-long United States journey at the Tijuana-San Diego border on August 12, 2012. A group composed of over 80 victims of violence and the Drug War, movement organizers, and journalists will kickoff the voyage, with the number expected to swell as allies join in route. The Caravan will travel across Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas, through the Deep South following the border eastbound, then proceed northward up the eastern seaboard to New York and then back down to end in Washington, D.C. Global Exchange will organize rallies, vigils, debates and media events to take place in major metropolises and small towns along the route. The Caravan will work to engage American progressives, Latino community leaders, students, policymakers and Drug War victims in a conversation about the imperative to build a trans-border movement for justice, peace, gun policy reform and social renewal. Sicilia speaks eloquently and lends a human dimension to such issues as
the security industrial complex, militarization, drug laws, gun laws, immigration and economic justice.

Infrastructure and Budget

Global Exchange will serve as the Caravan’s U.S.-based coordinator, provide
important infrastructure support, and collaborate with nationally active U.S.-based organizations and foundations including: the Latin American Working Group, Washington Office on Latin America, The RFK Center, regional leaders of the Brady Campaign, Heeding God’s Call, Presente.org, LCLAA, NALAAC, Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, Fellowship of Reconciliation, Veterans for Peace, Institute for Policy Studies, Drug Policy Alliance and many others. A full budget is available upon request.

Join the Movement

Featured in Time Magazine’s “Person of the Year,” December 2011 issue, Sicilia has gained a high profile through his work and raising his voice. The Peace Caravan can play a powerful role in building awareness – especially within the politically pivotal Latino U.S. constituency – on the urgent need to end the Drug War and invest in human welfare as the basis for peace throughout North America.
Join Javier, the MPJD, and dozens of binational allies, and raise your voice in solidarity calling to end to the current crisis. Join the Caravan for peace and justice on both sides of the border.

How to Help? / Contact

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