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I have long been an admirer of believers, people who have strong faiths and act on their faith.
I'm not talking about suicide bombers or people of that sort, I'm talking about people who take on life's difficulties because their faith compels them.
A woman I knew in Friday Harbor, who shunned what so many modern day women want; a successful career and a happy TV-like supportive family. Instead she opted to home school her children, grow food in her yard and raise animals so her children would be better off. The last time I talked to her two of her high school age kids were taking courses at the local university.
I met another woman recently who walked across the U.S. with a few hundred others in a great peace march in the 1980s. On more than one occasion members of her group were arrested for setting foot on places like the Nevada (Nuclear) Test Site or the Strategic Air Command. They were entirely peaceful in this activity, even though counter protesters hurled insults at them.
I admire the Archbishop Raymond Hunthausen, for the things he holds dear and has been willing to be arrested for.
People in the documentary scoffed at the peace marchers saying things like "Do you think that the Russians are just going to give up their bombs?" "Are we just supposed to lay down are arms, what good will that do?" They didn't realize that each of those marchers had an effect on the people they came in contact with on that march, even the stoic guards of the Strategic Air Command, …even the documentary audience watching them these 20 years later.
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